Bernadette stood up abruptly. “Here’s the deal: I’ll speak to Romulado about the Amanda Benson situation. He can talk to Nell. Maybe we can make some progress that way. But in the meantime you need to do your legwork. Amanda is hardly your only avenue of inquiry. Look at this desk! Didn’t I tell you to clear it off?”
“Yes, but—”
“No buts! I say clear it off, you clear it off. God knows, you could have Slice’s address sitting here in a subpoena response, and you wouldn’t even know it.” Bernadette looked at her watch. “It’s almost five now. You have half an hour. Then you’re coming with me to a retirement dinner I have to attend. What do you think of this suit, by the way? Too matronly?”
Bernadette wore a cherry red suit with a short-sleeved jacket, bright gold buttons, and a skintight skirt.
“Not at all. But—”
“Normally I like to show a bit of cleavage for evening. If you’ve got it, flaunt it, I always say. But I needed something I could wear to that meeting in D.C. this morning.”
“It’s very sexy,” Melanie said. Inappropriate, but sexy, she thought.
“You think so? Good.” Bernadette looked down at herself, smoothing her skirt.
“But how can I go to a retirement dinner when I have so much work—”
“Look, Romulado will be there. Maybe we can work something out on the Amanda Benson front. Half an hour, be there or be square,” she said, walking out the door, giving Melanie no chance to protest further.
30
HE DIALED AND LISTENED TO THE PHONE RING at the other end, tapping his fingers.
“FCI-Otisville. How may I direct your call?”
“Extension 6239.”
“One moment, please.”
He lit a cigarette while he waited.
“Inmate Records, Grasso speaking.”
“Sal. Hey, brother, how’s the Harley?”
“Oh, it’s you. What’s up?”
“You got that stuff we talked about?”
“You still at that same number?”
“Yup.”
“Call you back in ten minutes from another phone.”
HIS PHONE RANG ABOUT AN HOUR LATER.
“Hello?”
“It’s me,” Grasso said.
“That wasn’t no ten minutes, pal.”
“Hey, I’m doing you a fucking favor here!”
“Not like you’re not getting paid.”
“With what you’re paying me, I’m not risking my job, understand? Now, you want it or not?”
“Depends. Is it anything good? I’m not interested in hearing Diaz jack off for an hour while he talks to some bimbo.”
“Hey, don’t knock it till you try it. You wouldn’t believe some of the shit I hear. Girls moaning and shit, talking dirty. Real graphic. It’s like calling a 900 number, except free.”
“Ah, you’re all fucking perverts up there.”
“Okay, so how’m I gonna get the disk to you? I ain’t e-mailing it ’cause that leaves a trail.”
“Like I said, what is it first?”
“Nah, it’s real good. Diaz called a female prosecutor, I forget her name—”
“Melanie Vargas?”
“Yeah, that’s it. Says he got some hot information about a murder, and she better come visit right away. But get this: ‘The people around you are dirty,’ he says, ‘so watch out.’”
“Huh. He said that?”
“Yup.”
He paused, thinking.
“Hello?” Grasso said.
“Yeah, I’m still here. Do we know if she visited him yet?”
“Didn’t get a chance to check the log.”
“Well, do that. Right away. I need to know. It makes a difference.”
“Okay, but there’s gonna be an extra charge for that.”
“Don’t worry. You’ll get compensated. Hey, listen, I got another proposition for you. It requires a little more risk on your part, but the payoff is that much bigger.”
“Like, how much you talking?”
“Substantial. Could go into the five figures, depending on the service performed.”
“Huh, sounds very interesting. You got my full attention.”
“Okay, here it is. What are my options if I want to make this cocksucker Diaz disappear?”
31
WITH THE AFTERNOON SUN BEHIND HIM, DOLAN Reed stood in front of the picture window, towering over his desk like some enormous statue of a dictator. His face stood out bright red against the glare. Only years of practice prevented Mary Hale from cowering as she approached him.
“What the fuck is this?” he shouted, throwing a piece of paper across the desk at her. She reached out and took it, forcing herself to move slowly and calmly. She sat down in a chair in front of his desk and settled her reading glasses unhurriedly on her nose. She found it worked best with him never to show fear.
“This is, or would appear to be, a subpoena from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for all documents held by us pertaining to the Securilex transaction,” she stated matter-of-factly.
“I can fucking see that, you moron. Didn’t I tell you to handle this Melanie Vargas person?”
“Served by fax, I would note. Not proper service unless we agree to accept it that way.”
“What are you suggesting? Call her up and say we don’t accept it? That’s idiotic.”
“It would buy us a couple of days to respond while they effect proper service,” Mary pointed out.
“A couple of days to shred, you mean!”
Her placid face betrayed no emotion. She’d have to consider what she’d do if he instructed her to destroy documents called for by a subpoena. Things between them in recent times had not been to her satisfaction. Cleaning up his messes was no longer as rewarding as it had once been, so why subject herself to criminal liability? Her mind flew forward, rapidly making calculations. She had it in her power to incite a coup. But she’d see. She’d see how she felt when the time came.
Dolan Reed knew Mary well enough to perceive the resistance in her neutral gaze.
“Oh, for Chrissakes, don’t go getting all moral on me now.”
“Whatever your ultimate decision, Dodo, we’d be wise to at least appear compliant.”
The intercom buzzed simultaneously with the door flying open.
“Miss van der Vere,” his secretary’s flustered voice announced over the intercom as Sarah bolted in.
“Look at this!” Sarah cried, holding out a piece of paper.
“Our Miss Vargas has been busy,” Mary noted wryly, taking it from Sarah’s hand and perusing it. “Hmm. This one’s a bit different. It calls for testimony before the grand jury pertaining to certain criminal acts. I’m a bit rusty on my criminal-code citations. Securities fraud I recognize, but this other one…hmm.”
Mary got up and strolled over to the bookshelf, pulling out a crimson-bound volume, enjoying the way they followed her with their eyes. She turned the pages slowly, drawing out the suspense.
“Oh, of course! Title 18, United States Code, Section 1951. Interference with commerce by threats or violence. It’s the extortion statute. How could I have forgotten?”
She snapped the book shut and replaced it on the shelf, then made her way sedately to her seat. Leaning back, she held the subpoena at arm’s length to see it better.
“So Sarah’s being asked to testify about acts of extor tion. And below, in the section relating to documents sought, it asks that she bring any and all videotapes and audiotapes used or intended to be used to extort any benefit, monetary or otherwise, from Dolan Reed, members of the Reed firm, its employees, agents, or clients.” Mary stopped reading, raising her eyebrows. “Any idea what that’s about, Sarah?”
Dolan was staring at Sarah, thunderstruck. He sat down heavily in his colossal leather chair.
“Mary,” he said, in the quiet tone she recognized as his most dangerous, “would you be so kind as to leave us alone?”
32
MELANIE CALLED HOM
E FROM THE TAXI ON THE way to the retirement dinner and told Elsie she’d be late again. She hated doing it. She missed Maya terribly, and what’s more, Elsie was starting to make noises about quitting. But Melanie had no choice in the matter. It was imperative that she accompany Bernadette to the dinner. She’d discovered a bombshell, and she needed some time alone with her boss to break the news.
Sharing a cab with Bernadette, Melanie sank back on the ripped leather seat and let Bernadette talk at her. She dreaded opening her mouth. Bernadette wasn’t going to like what she had to say one bit. In the mess on her desk, she’d found some devastating information about Rommie Ramirez. Ironic that Bernadette was the one who’d told her to sort through it in the first place, or it might not have seen the light of day for a while.
According to the fingerprint reports she’d gotten from the lab, Rommie had mishandled a critical piece of evidence, possibly contaminated the whole crime scene. Somehow he’d touched the can of kerosene used to set the blaze in Jed Benson’s office, leaving his fingerprints on it. It was a major, career-threatening screwup, one he’d be hard-pressed to survive even with Bernadette’s support, and it put the whole prosecution at risk of being thrown out. She cringed at the thought of telling her boss, but how could she hold back something so big? There was other new information, too—evidence of Jed Benson’s corruption. Maybe she’d begin with that to ease the shock.
When the cab dropped them on First Avenue near the Fifty-ninth Street Bridge, she still hadn’t brought herself to say anything. She was getting cold feet. Maybe she should double-check with the lab. Maybe she should call Butch Brennan and go back over the crime scene step by step to figure out how the screwup had happened. Making such a damaging accusation against Bernadette’s boyfriend demanded rock-solid information. Melanie could only imagine the consequences if she opened her mouth and then it turned out she was wrong.
Looking up at the bridge’s squat outline against the flaming afternoon sun, she marveled at her ability to screw up her own life. To choose this, of all cases, to run after. She could blame it on bad luck, but it was starting to smell like bad judgment. To go after a high-profile, highly political case at a moment of personal crisis? How stupid was that? Muy estúpido, but no turning back now. She had important reasons to stick with it. Three important reasons, and their names were Rosario, Jasmine, and Amanda.
She and Bernadette walked into the dark restaurant, Melanie’s eyes seeing red echoes from the sun. She trailed Bernadette through the thick crowd, stopping every few feet so Bernadette could talk to the VIPs. Bernadette introduced her to everybody she spoke to, shouting over the din of voices and blaring Irish music. They headed to the bar. Melanie leaned against its dull, sticky surface, looking out over the crowd in the dim light as Bernadette held court. Cops were the worst violators of the antismoking laws: a haze of smoke hung over the low-ceilinged room. Except for a couple of other prosecutors she recognized, they were the only women there. Middle-aged men with aggressive ties and slicked-back hair, mostly bosses in the PD and the federal agencies, kept coming over, offering to buy them rounds of drinks. There would be no chance right now to speak with Bernadette privately. Melanie tried not to feel too relieved.
Bernadette threw herself into networking with frenzied abandon. Pretty soon she was on her third scotch, wheeling and dealing, scrounging for business and making promises, flirting and wangling. She was good at it. Melanie nursed a glass of cheap chardonnay and watched the spectacle, all the while picturing Bernadette’s face when she broke the news. By the time they sat down to dinner in the adjoining banquet room, Bernadette was totally smashed. They had lingered so long at the bar that they ended up seated far from the dais, at the back of the long, narrow banquet room. Their table was empty except for two stragglers who sat down across from them. One tall and gaunt, the other with jowls and a beer belly, they greeted Bernadette by name, then fell into animated conversation about the Mets.
“Fucking Siberia. Should’ve saved a seat,” Bernadette complained, her words slurring delicately, her head lolling to one side like a sodden blossom after a rainstorm.
Did it make any sense to tell Bernadette when she was in this condition? She’d be less likely to evaluate things objectively, more likely to lash out at Melanie for being the bearer of bad news. Maybe Melanie should just make an excuse and leave, so she could do her homework properly before dropping the bombshell. She had plenty of good reasons: Dan was still waiting for her at the hospital. Elsie was fuming at home. Steve had left her a message saying he’d gotten them an appointment with that marriage counselor for later this evening. She was pleased by his fast work, but she hadn’t even had time to return his call.
“Hey, Bernadette,” she began tentatively.
Bernadette didn’t hear her; she was too busy signaling the waiter for another drink. Up on the dais, far away, someone tapped on a glass. A powerfully built man with steel gray hair walked up and adjusted a microphone, moving with a boss’s arrogance. He winced at the eardrum-piercing feedback, then began to talk. Melanie raised her voice so she could be heard over the drone of his speech and the bursts of laughter from the crowd.
“Bernadette, listen, I was thinking—”
Bernadette turned to her with a warm smile. She looked so relaxed, so normal, that it made Melanie realize she almost never saw her happy. Suddenly she understood it all. How vulnerable Bernadette was at this moment in her life. How dependent she was on Rommie and how blind to his flaws. In Bernadette’s mind, Rommie was the only thing standing between her and a lonely, empty middle age. Ugh, Melanie couldn’t, she just couldn’t shatter that illusion. And she couldn’t get up and walk out, leaving her boss sitting alone, drunk, at this table. She’d stay, at least until Rommie showed up.
“I was thinking we should talk about the Benson case,” Melanie said.
“Good idea. What new developments do you have to report?” Bernadette dug in her bag and pulled out a cigarette. “Hmm, when are they gonna serve the rubber chicken? I’m starting to get woozy.”
“I found out some surprising stuff about Jed Benson,” Melanie said. She’d start with the easy part, then see where it went. If Bernadette seemed receptive, maybe she would bring up the fingerprint report after all.
“Nothing you could tell me about Jed would surprise me, Melanie.”
“Really?”
“I knew Jed. He definitely had a dark side. Mmmhmm.”
Melanie had been thinking about the Bensons’ bank records, buried in the pile on her desk and just opened. They were not the bank records of an honest man. But there was something lascivious in Bernadette’s tone that made Melanie think she was talking about something else.
“You mean he was a womanizer?” Melanie guessed.
Bernadette’s drink came, and she tossed it back like a sailor. “Yeah! In a big way! He seduced me, you know.”
“Wow. No. I had no idea,” Melanie said. Boy, get Bernadette drunk and no telling what you might learn.
“We’re talking a lot of years ago now. It was a pretty tough experience for me. I’m not saying I wasn’t willing. But I was naive, and he took advantage. Nowadays I’d have a slam-dunk sexual-harassment claim.”
“Why, what did he do?”
“I’d only been on the job a few months, and Jed was the big boss. He was famous and so gorgeous. I had the worst—I mean, the worst—crush on him. I used to look up his court appearances in the calendar and then go hang around outside the courtrooms, waiting for him to come out. I was hot back then, honey, lemme tell you. Jed noticed.”
The waiter interrupted her, setting down plates of greasy chicken parmigiana slathered in runny pink sauce.
“Yuck, look at this shit. I can’t eat this.” Bernadette stubbed out one cigarette and fished in her bag for another, fumbling with her lighter, dropping it on the floor. Melanie leaned over and picked it up.
“I had no idea you were such a smoker, Bernadette.”
“Mmm, when I drink. Keep sayin
g I’ll quit, but it’s hard because Romulado smokes, and we spend a lot of time together.” She slumped back, smoking thoughtfully, staring off into space. “So one day—one evening, actually—I was working late, and Jed just called me up and told me to report to his office. That’s it. He didn’t even give me a reason, right? I thought I was getting chosen for some big case or something. When I got there, the place was deserted, so I just walked right in. He was sitting at his desk, talking to a reporter on the telephone. I sat, and he stared at me while he finished his conversation. The way he looked me up and down, I understood right away why he’d called. You know what they call that?”
“What?” Melanie asked.
Bernadette laughed harshly. “A booty call. A goddamn booty call, right there in the middle of the office. But I fell for it—hook, line, and sinker. His eyes were the most unbelievable shade of green you ever saw, like grass in the springtime. So he gets up, locks the door. Doesn’t say a word, not even hello. What stays with me is the feeling of my skin sticking to that damn leather couch.” She dropped her chin onto her hand and sighed, her hazel eyes cloudy with drink.
“What happened after that?”
“Oh, he’d call now and then. We’d have sex. I kept thinking it would amount to something, you know? I had fantasies he’d leave his wife and marry me. Huh, was I foolish when I was young!” Her cynical laugh didn’t disguise the hurt in her eyes.
“Do you think Nell Benson knew about Jed’s other women?” Melanie asked.
“Unless she was dumb as a stone. But either she wanted to be with him that bad or else she liked the money. So tell me what you found out. You think Nell had him whacked for the insurance proceeds?” Bernadette asked.
“I can’t believe you just said that. All along you’ve been acting like the only possible answer is the retaliation theory.”
“Don’t get me wrong—I still think that’s the most likely. Romulado’s always believed that this was a retaliatory hit, and it makes sense. Jed prosecuted the founder of the Blades, Blades were involved in Jed’s murder. Ipso facto. If it quacks like a duck, it is a duck. On the other hand, Nell Benson is an evil fucking bitch, and I wouldn’t put anything past her.”
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