Hostile witness vc-1

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by William Lashner




  Hostile witness

  ( Victor Carl - 1 )

  William Lashner

  William Lashner

  Hostile witness

  Part I

  Indictment

  1

  WHAT I HAVE LEARNED through my short and disastrous legal career is that in law, as in life, the only rational expectation is calamity. Take my first case as a lawyer.

  There were three of us at the start, fresh out of law school, hanging up our shingles together because none of the large and prosperous firms in Philadelphia would have us. We were still young then, still wildly optimistic, still determined to crack it on our own. Guthrie, Derringer and Carl. I'm Carl. All it would take, we figured, was one case, one accidental paraplegia, one outrageous sexual harassment, one slip of the surgeon's knife, one slam-bam-in-your-face case to make our reputations, not to mention our fortunes. We were only one case away from becoming figures of note in the legal community that had so far left us out in the cold. But before that grand and munificent case came walking through our door, we were sitting with our feet on our desks, reading the newspapers, waiting for anything.

  "I've got something right here for you, Victor," said Samuel R. Sussman, dropping a document on my desk. He was a bellicose little man who leaned forward when he talked and did annoying things like jab his finger into my chest for emphasis. But he was family.

  The document was a demand note, personally guaranteed by a Winston Osbourne, representing a debt of one million dollars. Seven figures was two figures more than anything I had ever seen before.

  "I picked up this baby at a discount," said my Uncle Sammy.

  "What exactly do you want me to do with it?"

  "Collect it," he said with a finger jab. "Osbourne says he's broke and not going to pay me a cent. Get what you can off this society schmuck, and whatever you find keep a quarter for yourself. You're getting married in the spring, right?"

  "That's the plan," I said.

  He winked. "Consider this my wedding gift."

  That was how my first case out of law school came to be a collection. I had not intended to use my degree to collect debts, I had not gone to law school so I could most effectively foreclose on the houses of the poor, but at the start I was desperate for anything. And besides, Winston Osbourne was not your usual deadbeat.

  He was the scion of an old Protestant family, born to wealth, to society, given every advantage withheld from me, and through talent, luck, and sheer perseverance he became bankrupt. Tall, finely manicured, with a prosperous round face and sincere thin lips, he was of the Bryn Mawr Osbournes, an old and revered family, blue of blood, properly Mayflowered through a line of cousins, listed with the Biddles and the Ambers and the Peppers in the Social Register. In every expression, in every gesture, Osbourne's breeding showed. He looked like a somebody, one wasn't sure exactly whom, but a somebody who was a something and I guess that was how he managed to borrow so much money on his personal guarantee, money he invested in a huge tract of undeveloped land in Whitpain Township, seeking to reap the miracle benefits of subdivision. "Real estate is the only sure thing," he used to say, jaw locked, chin up, "because they simply can't make any more of it." As he strode across his glorious acreage in Whitpain Township, planning the location of the fine luxury homes he would build there, he must not have noticed the strange foul liquid, pale and sulfurous, like the earth's own bile, seeping into each of his footprints. Within six months of buying the property Winston Osbourne faced environmental catastrophe, and within a year he was in utter default.

  "So you're the grubby little shyster who's chasing my money," Winston Osbourne said to me when I first hauled him into my office in search of his assets. He was wearing a perfect gray suit, Gucci loafers, his sandy hair was trimmed close and neat, a gold Rolex flashed from beneath his cuff, and he actually said that. Well, not in those exact words, maybe, but that's what he was thinking. It was as clear as the cleft in his chin. What he actually said was, "I've lost almost everything I ever had, Victor, and what little I have left is judgment proof. But I'm willing to pay you ten thousand dollars to end this. Believe me, Victor, that is the most you'll ever get from me."

  I rejected his offer, and though I had a chip with which to bargain him higher, to Jew him up as it were, I thought the wiser play was to hold onto it, to flash it elsewhere in an effort to pry loose the entire million. I had no intention of letting him off the hook that was buried deep within his properly locked jaw. Winston Osbourne represented something to which I knew I could never ascend but my exclusion from which I could never quite accept. His old-line family name, the glorious prospects handed him at birth, his natural charm, even his bland sandy good looks, I resented it all, and for all of it he would pay. That was why that very day the process server was delivering a subpoena to Osbourne's house in exclusive Gladwyne, ordering his wife to appear in my offices for deposition. I had plans for Mrs. Osbourne.

  She was a handsome woman, elegant tweed suit, skin surgically tight around her blue eyes, pearls, hair that was done, I mean really done, a hundred and forty dollars' worth of done, and I had her just where I wanted her, in our conference room, across the table from me, required to answer all my questions and sworn to tell the truth. She had chosen to come without counsel, which pleased me.

  "How many cars do you and your husband own, Mrs. Osbourne?" I asked.

  "Three," she said in a reedy, masculine voice. "There is the station wagon."

  "That's a Volvo, right?"

  "Right," she said. "It is a Volvo. Then there is the blue sedan."

  "A BMW?"

  "From your tone of voice it sounds like a crime, Mr. Carl."

  "And the other?" I asked.

  "A vintage car my husband maintains. His toy, really, but quite valuable. It was his father's."

  "A Duesenberg."

  "Yes, that's right. We have an old Lincoln, for transporting our dogs to the shows, but that's hardly worth anything anymore. It's almost four years old."

  "So that makes four cars total."

  "Yes, I suppose," said Mrs. Osbourne.

  "And in whose names are the titles to these cars?"

  "Mine and my husband's."

  "Even the Duesenberg?"

  "Yes, Mr. Carl," she said, confidently stroking her pearls. "Everything is in both of our names and, as you know, I've signed nothing."

  I knew that, yes I did. In Pennsylvania, property owned by a husband and wife together cannot be grabbed to satisfy the individual debts of either, so long as they remain married. Mrs. Osbourne, as best as I could determine, owed nothing to no one, not even to American Express. She had not guaranteed the loan and therefore all property she owned jointly with her husband was safely hidden from my grasp, so long as they remained married. And everything Winston Osbourne owned, his house, his cars, his bank accounts, even his damn Rolex, everything he owned he owned jointly with his wife. Well, almost everything.

  "You own a house in Gladwyne, Mrs. Osbourne, is that right?"

  "Yes. The title is in both of our names."

  "Has the house been appraised?"

  "For insurance purposes, yes. It was appraised at two and a half million dollars. But that is our house, we live there, we raised our children there, we would never think of selling."

  "You're aware, aren't you, Mrs. Osbourne, that your husband owes Mr. Sussman a million dollars."

  "I am aware that Mr. Sussman is a speculator who bought that note for an absurdly low amount and now wants to grab his handful of flesh. My husband is a wonderful man, Mr. Carl, and I love him very much. But he is not the cleverest of businessmen, not as sharp, I am sure, as your Mr. Sussman. Anyone who lends my husband money does so at his own risk."

  I a
ctually admired Mrs. Osbourne as she sat in our crummy little conference room and so bravely defended her husband's standard of living. If I was in less need of my twenty-five percent share of Winston Osbourne's cash I might have thought twice about what I was planning to do. But even after a second thought I would have continued. My investigation had uncovered information of which Mrs. Osbourne might not have been aware and of which I assumed it was my duty to apprise her.

  "You own a property in Aspen, is that right, Mrs. Osbourne?"

  "A condominium, yes. The children love to ski."

  "And that is in both of your names?"

  "Of course."

  "And there is the property in Palm Beach."

  "Yes, but that is not ours. That is owned by Winston's mother. Winston's grandfather built it, it is a fabulous place, really. Have you been to Palm Beach, Mr. Carl?"

  "No."

  "Where do you winter?"

  "In front of the television."

  "I see. Well, the house in Palm Beach is not ours. We are permitted to use it, but when we are there we are guests. My understanding is that Winston's mother has willed it to Winston's brother, Richard."

  "So my patience would not be rewarded."

  "No, I'm afraid not. The entire family is aware of Winston's current troubles. Whatever is to be left is being left to the children. Winston has made you an offer, has he not?"

  "And there is the boat," I continued, ignoring her comment about the offer. "You own a boat."

  "Yes." She sighed. "He named it after me. We leave it in Florida."

  "How big is the boat?"

  "Something like forty feet, I'm not sure. Winston is the sailor. He is quite dashing in his white ducks and blue blazer."

  "In whose name is the boat titled?"

  "Isn't this getting repetitious, Mr. Carl? It is in both of our names. Everything is in both of our names."

  "Including the condominium in Atlantic City?"

  "We don't own a condominium in Atlantic City."

  "Are you sure?" I said. "There is a condo in a building right on the Boardwalk titled to Winston Osbourne. Let me show you a copy of the deed. I'll mark this P. 12."

  "There must be some mistake, you must be thinking of another man. We don't own a condominium in Atlantic City."

  "The person living there identified your husband as the owner."

  "I'm not aware of a condominium in Atlantic City."

  "Well, this person living there now says she doesn't pay rent to Mr. Osbourne, and I was wondering if she paid the rent to you. Any such rent would be attachable on behalf of Mr. Sussman."

  "No, of course I am not receiving the rent."

  "Perhaps you know the person living in your husband's apartment, a Miss LeGrand?"

  "No."

  "Let me show you a picture. I'll mark this P. 13."

  "What is this? This is a brochure of some sort."

  "Yes, for a gentlemen's club called the Pussy Willow. Why don't you look through it. I'm referring to the section about the exotic dancers. Let me show you. The woman right there."

  "Tiffany LeGrand?"

  "Oh, so you do know her," I said, even though the shaking of her head, her dazed eyes, opened brutally, unnaturally wide, the death grip with which she now held onto her pearls, all of it stated with total clarity that no, no, she did not know her, had never heard of her, no.

  I ran into Winston Osbourne again the gray and tremulous fall of which now I speak, a full six years after I had begun my relentless search for his final dollar. Halfway up 21st Street from Chestnut, just before my small and decrepit office building, yawned an alleyway. There was a stink to that alley, it was where the dumpsters were stored for the buildings on either side; it smelled of fish bones from the seafood restaurant on 22nd Street, of rotting vegetables from the Korean grocery beneath my office. Two homeless men shared the alley as sure as if they had signed a lease. They pissed in the entranceways of all the surrounding buildings, like wolves marking their territory. They panhandled, drank out of brown paper bags, shouted obscenities when the mood struck, and sometimes actually worked by carrying a sandwich board for Condom Nation, a prophylactic store, back and forth in the neighborhood. Every time I walked up 21st Street, I accelerated as I approached the alley, keeping my eyes straight and my shoulders hunched, trying to avoid any contact with my neighbors. I had just passed the gap one night that fall when I heard my name being called and felt a grab at my arm.

  I whirled away from the contact, expecting to see one of the homeless men, but who I saw instead was Winston Osbourne. His raincoat was grimed, his hair long and stringy, his once prosperous face now drawn and sallow. His fingernails struck me particularly; where they had been manicured and glossy they were now long, yellow, opaque with ridges. They were the fingernails of a corpse.

  "Victor," he said, his voice still dripping with superiority. "We've been discussing you, Victor."

  "You should have your lawyer contact me, Mr. Osbourne," I said, staring at his nails. "I can only speak to your lawyer."

  He took a rolling step toward me. There was a limp now that hadn't been there before. "Yes. But you see, I couldn't afford to pay him." He took another step forward. "Since the divorce I've gone through a difficult time, Victor. Much toil, much trouble. But I'm certain I can see my way clear of it now."

  "That's good, Mr. Osbourne."

  "But I need to open a bank account, Victor, a local account for business purposes, and every time I try you end up attaching the funds. This has become very inconvenient for me."

  "With interest, Mr. Osbourne, you still owe Mr. Sussman almost nine hundred thousand dollars." My gambit with his wife had not worked as well as I had intended. Osbourne, sheared in the divorce settlement, had been able to secrete most of what little his wife's lawyer had left him before I could file my attachments. Foreign bank accounts, straw-man holding companies. He was much better at hiding money than at making it.

  "I'm aware of exactly all that I owe Sussman," said Winston Osbourne. "And I do wish I could pay him back for everything. You too, Victor. In fact, plans are being laid this very instant to pay you back. But I need to open a bank account. I can't revive my prospects without a bank account, now can I, Victor?"

  "Have you talked to a lawyer about declaring bankruptcy?"

  "Yes, of course. But I'm an Osbourne, Victor, something you can't begin to understand." He shuffled his feet uncomfortably. "And not all my debts are dischargeable, I've been told."

  "What do you want, Mr. Osbourne?"

  "I want you to leave me alone. All I'm asking is for you to behave reasonably. This is your last chance. I'm willing to pay you to leave me alone."

  "How much?"

  "Ten thousand dollars, like before. But, unfortunately, nothing for at least a year."

  "Mr. Osbourne, you still have a vintage Duesenberg hidden somewhere. I believe you have money stashed in the Cayman Islands, as well as in certain Swiss banks. I understand you recently traveled to Florida, out of season, yes, but still Florida. Frankly, I think you can do better, Mr. Osbourne, than a slim promise of maybe ten thousand dollars to be paid in a year."

  "You can't know how difficult it's been for me since the divorce."

  "Florida. The Sunshine State."

  His head dropped slightly. "My daughter insisted I go with her."

  "Where is your Duesenberg, Mr. Osbourne?"

  "It's not worth anything anymore. It's too old, I haven't been able to keep it in repair. For your own good, Victor, take my offer."

  "Turn your car over to the sheriff, Mr. Osbourne, and we'll talk."

  I walked away from him, toward the door of the building, when I heard him shout, "By God, man. I just want to be able to open a damn bank account like a human being."

  I couldn't erase the image of Winston Osbourne and his fingernails from my mind for the whole of that season. There was a time in his life when the wealthy, handsome, socially prominent, socially registered, socially social Winston Osbourne was
everything I ever wanted to be. Now, as I struggled with the frustrations in my life, he was everything I feared I would become. The case we had been waiting for, the slam-bam-in-your-face case, had never come, and we too now had bills we couldn't meet, dunning letters came by the bushelful, we couldn't pay our secretary week to week, not to mention the office rent. One of my partners had already bailed and I couldn't really blame him, though I did. Six years out of law school and I was flat-out broke, one step up from the grimed broken figure I saw outside my office. I had once bitterly resented Winston Osbourne for all he was born to, but now I feared falling to his depths and so I resented him all the more. If he wanted to open a bank account that meant there was money and if there was money, by God, I would get my hands on it. Every last dollar, you bastard, every last dollar until you die.

  I see now that I was suffering a profound weariness that autumn. The disappointments of my life had worn me down, not to mention that I was alone and lonely and had been both for far too long. Whatever optimism I had once held had been supplanted by a deep and gnawing resentment of everyone and everything. Then in that sad gray fall there finally arrived the chance for which I had been waiting. It was an opportunity rooted in murder, premised on betrayal, an opportunity that required the suspension of all I once held sacrosanct, but still there it was. And the only question was whether I was man enough to pay its price.

  When I think back upon that season I see its inauguration in the apparitional appearance of the ruined Winston Osbourne, but from there it spun furiously out of control. It was the season of my opportunity, yes, but also a season of corruption, of treachery, a calamitous season of self-delusion and abnegation. Most of all it was a season of love, a sweat-soaked love that still leaves me gasping when I awake with a start in the middle of the night and remember. It was a season that promised my most desperate dreams and stroked my deepest fears.

  It was fall in Philadelphia.

 

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