The Second Chair

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The Second Chair Page 16

by John Lescroart


  He stopped just inside, carefully closed the door behind him. “You busy?”

  She was at the computer, work showing on the screen. “I decided you were at least a little bit right. If I’m going to have my name on the door, I should pull some of the weight.”

  He drew around one of the folding chairs, flipped it open and sat on it. “That’s funny, I decided I was at least mostly wrong. The firm’s making a fortune. I was a horse’s ass. Am.” He gestured vaguely around the room. “If you don’t want to work, you’ve earned the right not to.” He waited a moment. “So how are you?”

  She turned to face him. Thought a moment. “I’m all right. I think if I exercised any more, I’d self-destruct. Which is maybe what I was trying to do. I’m damn sure already the strongest woman my age I know, if any man has the guts to want to find out.” But the smile faded. “But it wasn’t physical strength, though, after all, was it? It was bullets.”

  “It was bullets,” Hardy agreed.

  A silence ensued. In only a few seconds, Gina’s face tracked through several variations on the themes of grief, revenge and regret. Last year she’d killed a man, and the experience had scarred her. “So what brings you down to this neck of the woods? If it was just your apology—unnecessary, but nice.”

  “It wasn’t just that. It’s Amy.”

  He gave Gina a brief recap of the events leading up to this morning’s fiasco in juvenile court, and by the time he finished, Gina had turned and was facing him, her face set with worry. “She made the deal before she had the client’s consent?”

  “Right.” Then he added, “It’s possible she thought he had given it.”

  “How’s that? Did she have him sign a statement?”

  “I don’t think so, no. She called me last night and said it was locked up. Solid.”

  “But didn’t get his John Hancock? And then he went sideways?”

  “Last minute, in the courtroom.” Hardy shrugged. “It happens.”

  “Not as often as you might think if you do it right. So. What do you want me to do?”

  A pause. “For Amy? Nothing. For me, I could use some guidance. I’m the managing partner, and I’ve managed this whole thing wrong up until now. I knew her client hadn’t signed off. I kept convincing myself that I should trust her judgment that he’d come around. That was irresponsible enough, but it was more than that, really.”

  Roake cocked her head. “What, though, exactly?”

  Hardy took a minute deciding what he should say. “You may remember, Amy’s father died a few months ago. Since then she’s been . . . distracted. And her work’s been suffering, today’s problem being the best of several good examples.” Again, he paused. “I can’t help but feel that a lot of where this has gotten to is my fault. I should have stepped in at the git-go, and three or four other stops along the way. But the point is, she’s been playing fast and loose with this boy’s life and it probably feels relatively okay to her because she’s playing fast and loose with her own.”

  Roake leaned back into her chair, let out a heavy breath. “People are going to do what they’re going to do, Diz. Do you think she’s competent? Legally?”

  “I don’t know. She’s got a good mind. But the only bright spot right now, if you want to call it that, is that she’s somehow conned the parents, who are paying the bills, that this has been her plan all along, to pretend to go along with the deal to get Andrew declared a juvenile.”

  “Which, I take it, isn’t true?”

  “Right.”

  “So she’s still lying to her clients?”

  Hardy tried a weak grin. “ ‘Spinning’ is the preferred term of art, I believe. But it’s going to unravel fast enough, you watch. Boscacci’s going to demand a seven-oh-seven before she knows what hit her. And if she loses there, which is a good bet because not only does she have the burden of proof, but the judge already hates her, then her boy’s looking at adult murder with specials.” Hardy found a chair and sat. “I’m thinking I have to step in, take her off it. That would mitigate the personal issues with Boscacci and the judge anyway. Although the paying customers currently think Amy is a genius. If I yank her, they quit. Maybe she quits, too. Did I mention the fees here? It’s going to go adult murder, and that’s six figures, high profile. We don’t want to lose it.”

  Roake crossed her arms over her chest, whirled halfway around in her chair, and stared out toward one of the windows. Finally: “If memory serves, the seven-oh-seven’s not about evidence, is it? It’s only a question of whether the child can be rehabilitated in the juvenile system or should be punished in the adult. Isn’t that about right?”

  Hardy nodded.

  “Okay, then. And how is Andrew’s record otherwise?”

  “Nothing to speak of. One joyride, community service and a fine. Expunged.”

  “Well, then.” Roake considered a moment. “In that case, she might have a shot. The court can’t say that the boy’s already a hardened criminal and needs to spend the rest of his life locked away. She might pull it off.”

  “Maybe.” Hardy had his doubts. He knew perhaps better than Roake that the last of the five criteria in determining whether a defendant was legally a juvenile or an adult was the gravity of the offense, and there was nothing more serious than murder. On that alone, Hardy thought, the 707 hearing was doomed to failure.

  He ran a hand down his cheek. “I don’t want to step on her, Gina, or God knows, fire her. But her focus has been off on this since the beginning, and now, especially after she reneged on Boscacci, he’s going to want to take her down.” He sat back, crossed his arms in a pensive mode, looked from window to window around the room. Suddenly, he came back to Roake, his eyes bright with an idea. “How about if I tell her I’d like to sit second chair?”

  Roake gave it some thought. “She might resent that, too. She might even quit. And your hours on top of hers? Would the clients go for that?”

  “I don’t care about my hours,” Hardy said. “I wouldn’t charge for them. Long term, getting Amy straight and on track is worth more to the firm than I’d bill, don’t you think?”

  Roake smiled, spoke gently. “You don’t have to ask me, but that doesn’t sound like the managing partner I know and love. He’s been pretty tough on billing lately, even with some of our partners.”

  “Touché,” Hardy said, smiling.

  But Roake was back to business. “She still might quit, though. Take it as a vote of no-confidence.”

  “Except that she knows she’s screwed up. I think it might be more likely, especially with the other pressures she’s feeling, that she’ll be grateful she’s not fired.”

  Roake, warming to the idea, was nodding. “Okay. You could certainly say you’ve got every right as managing partner to demand a closer accountability. You can’t let another mistake happen on your watch. What’s she going to say? No?”

  “She could. She might.”

  But Roake shook her head. “Sure, but I don’t think so. I think she’ll thank you for offering. So, assuming she’d be okay with it, how would you handle it logistically?”

  Hardy came forward, suddenly pumped up at the prospect. “The way I see it, I get up to speed on the evidence while she’s arguing the rehab criteria at the seven-oh-seven. That way, even if we lose at the hearing, we’re stronger for the adult trial. Plus, between you and me, if her personal problems become too much for her, I’m already on board. The clients now know me. It’s good insurance.” He dropped his head for a moment, stunned at how right this decision felt.

  Frannie’s message the night before had struck a reverberant chord. He needed something to reconnect himself with who he was—an officer of the court, a justice freak, a guardian of the law. What he needed for his own good was a pure case, where you defended your client because the presumption was innocence. If the prosecution couldn’t prove otherwise, couldn’t prevail against a spirited defense, the client walked.

  This was neither cynical nor manipulative—it was
the essence of the system. And though Hardy had lost some faith, a great deal of faith, in the mechanics, in the way it sometimes played out in the real world, suddenly it was crystal clear that this imperfect system, if he still believed in anything, was what he believed in. More, it was an opportunity for his own redemption that he couldn’t let pass.

  He hadn’t taken a murder case in over three years. They were too time-consuming, too physically grueling, too emotionally demanding. They played hell with his home life.

  There was better money to be made quicker and more fun to be had cutting deals. You could skim along the top of things and not worry too much—hell, not worry at all. You laughed until your face hurt, and you’d be damned if you’d ever have to internalize any of your clients’ problems. You just fixed their messes.

  And yet at some level, Hardy never lost his awareness that the fun was about as ephemeral and nourishing as cotton candy, and often left a worse aftertaste. And the money often felt dirty.

  He might not have wanted to face it squarely, but once he did, it wasn’t any mystery to him why he’d been drinking too much. He could see where it would all lead if he continued. The picture wasn’t pretty. No, more. It was so ugly that, thank God, it had made Frannie cry.

  Maybe it was time to engage again, to let himself care.

  He lifted his head, broke a weary half grin. “So. Second chair? You think?”

  Roake nodded. “It’s got your name on it.”

  Amy Wu hadn’t been able to face the idea of going back into the Sutter Street office and facing Dismas Hardy and her other colleagues again, not after the brutal dressing-down she’d taken at the hands of Allan Boscacci, who’d first kept her waiting for almost two hours, then informed her that he had already filed a motion for a 707 hearing on the Bartlett matter, to have the boy declared an adult.

  He hoped she realized what she’d done, and wanted her to be under no illusion—she wasn’t getting away with it. Oh, and by the way, if she ever wanted to communicate with him about any case ever again, she should do it in writing, signed by her, no “dictated, not read” bullshit. And he didn’t mean e-mail. And she would find this to be the policy for every assistant district attorney in his office.

  Badly shaken, fighting tears, she’d crossed Bryant, then descended into the dark and ripe-smelling stairway under the bail bondsman’s office that led down to Lou the Greek’s. She’d taken her stool at the bar and ordered straight vodka.

  No cosmopolitans today. No frou-frou little cocktails. She wasn’t here to party. She was drinking.

  By five-thirty, Lou’s was jammed and Amy’s immediate troubles had mostly been drowned. The bar was Mecca for the lawyers and cops who worked out of the Hall of Justice, and Amy’s situation with Andrew Bartlett was as nothing compared with the shit storm that had developed over Deputy Chief Glitsky’s handling of the LeShawn Brodie matter.

  During the late morning and early afternoon, Brodie had taken the lives of seven of his hostages, one every twenty minutes while the local cops and the highway patrol argued over who had jurisdiction to provide a helicopter that would take him to the Sacramento airport. There, Brodie evidently had been convinced that authorities would also supply him with a plane to take him to Cuba. In fact, a police sniper shot him in the forehead when he’d gotten one step outside of the diner’s entrance, while the helicopter waited, its rotors twirling, in the parking lot.

  Both of the televisions over the bar at Lou’s had been carrying nothing else for the past several hours, while the pros and cons of the original police strategy had fueled an endless and passionate debate among the clientele.

  By the time it had gotten dark, Amy had had six vodka martinis and was ready to go home and get some sleep. But an aggressively clever young defense attorney named Barry had outlasted the other hopefuls around her, and now he had his arm around her as they negotiated the doors and came out into the suddenly full-dark night.

  At the top of the stairs, Barry turned to her and she found herself being kissed. Then they were walking together down the alley that ran alongside Lou’s. She had herself tucked inside the jacket of his suit against the chill. She’d already told him she didn’t think she should drive, but he said he was sober enough and could drive them both.

  He was parked where she had parked. Where every visitor to the Hall parked. In the All-Day just up at the end of the alley.

  The lot was one block wide, bounded by three-story buildings on both sides, closing the place in. Every spot, alley to alley, was filled during business hours every day. Now the place held only three cars—Amy’s by the near building, and then Barry’s car and another one parked in adjacent spaces on the far side. One light, burning from high on a pole by the deserted pay station, cast its pool over the area, leaving the borders in deep shadow.

  When they got to his car, Barry opened the door for her and she lowered herself, taking care lest she collapse into the seat. As they backed out, the car’s headlights raked the building in front of them, then washed over the car in the adjacent parking space.

  Following the beam through heavy-lidded eyes, Amy sat up abruptly. “Wait a minute. Stop!”

  “What?” Barry slammed on the brakes.

  Before the car had fully stopped, Amy opened the door. She was halfway out, staggering. She fell once, cut her knees, then got up and moved forward again.

  “What are you doing?” Barry, still in the car, called from behind her.

  She turned and pointed. “Get your lights next to that car, over by the wall.” She kept moving over toward a dark amorphous mound on the pavement up against the building. As the headlights hit it, its shape became obvious.

  Barry came running up next to her. “Jesus Christ!”

  The body was dressed in a business suit under a trenchcoat. It lay skewed on its side, the face visible now in the headlights. A dark pool had formed under the head, but Amy wasn’t able to pay any attention to other details. She stood transfixed, unable to tear her eyes from the awful, vacant stare of the victim.

  The dead man was Allan Boscacci.

  PART TWO

  12

  Excuse me, are you a Mr. Hardy?”

  It was all he could do to remain polite with the sweet young waitress. It was Date Night and he was out with his wife, having the world’s best chicken at the Zuni Cafe. Everyone in his world orbit knew that Wednesday night with Frannie was the one time he was absolutely not to be disturbed. To further that end, he had taken to leaving his cellphone and pager at home. He put down his fork mid-bite, used his napkin, nodded and forced a polite smile. “I have that distinction,” he said.

  “You have a telephone call.”

  Frannie, thinking the same thought as Hardy—that it must be one of the kids and if they were interrupting Date Night it was a true emergency—was halfway out of her chair when the waitress added, “An Amy Wu.”

  Glitsky, in his uniform and on his way to the ring of police cars in the lot, stopped in his tracks, changed directions and walked over to a subdued group who stood in a knot under the pool of light from the pole lamp by the pay booth. He nodded all around, said to Hardy and Frannie, “What are you two doing here?”

  Hardy motioned to the circle that was now crawling with police. “They asked us not to leave until they’d talked to us. We’re waiting.” He half-turned. “You remember my associate, Amy Wu.” Hardy paused, came out with it. “She discovered the body.”

  Wu came forward, still a bit unsteady, and gave Glitsky her hand. “Good to see you again, sir.”

  Glitsky held onto her hand, squinted down into her face. “Have you been drinking?”

  “Yes, sir,” she said. “A few down at Lou the Greek’s. Barry and I. But we’re fine now.”

  The other man came forward, introduced himself—Barry Hess—said he was who’d called 911. Glitsky took that in, stepped toward the crowd by the body, stopped again. “Anybody get statements from you two yet?” he asked both Hess and Wu. As the people who’d discovered
the body, both could probably look forward to a long night in a small interrogation room.

  “No, sir,” Hess replied.

  “I’ll try to get somebody over here soon,” Glitsky said. Then he closed in on Frannie. “I can see your husband, who lives for parties like this one, but why are you here?”

  She forced a weak smile. “It started out as Date Night.”

  “Right. Of course. Great timing,” Glitsky said. “You okay?”

  Frannie nodded. “But maybe we’d be more comfortable in a car with the heat on.”

  Glitsky tossed his head toward Hardy’s car. “Go on ahead. I’ll send somebody over.”

  After Wu’s short interview at the scene with Sergeant Belou—she had promised to come and give a better, more coherent statement at the Hall tomorrow—she didn’t want to be with Barry anymore. It was obvious to Frannie that, badly shaken by the murder, and still very drunk, she didn’t want to go home alone, either, so she asked Wu to come and stay with them at their house tonight. Then Dismas could take her down here tomorrow, where she could do any more business that needed to be done at the Hall, pick up her car.

  Wu passed out on the drive home. They had to wake her up to let her off at the house with Frannie while Hardy drove around the neighborhood—a constant ritual—and tried to find a parking place. By the time he got back to the house, she was asleep again on the fold-out bed in the family room behind the kitchen.

  Hardy couldn’t sleep. Sometime well after midnight, he swung quietly out of bed, pulled on a pair of drawstring gray sweatpants and went downstairs.

  A bulb over the stove threw out about fifteen watts in the otherwise dark room, and Hardy opened the refrigerator and stared into it. What he craved was some alcohol, get his brain to stop its endless looping. Today there’d been the long nap in the afternoon, no wine with lunch, an interrupted dinner. The drunken condition of Amy Wu, passed out on the fold-a-bed, and Frannie’s lack of interest in a nightcap, had somehow constrained him from a drink when they’d gotten home.

 

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