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Proof of Intent

Page 33

by William J. Coughlin


  “You’re a bulldog, Charley. That’s why I hired you. So if I’d tried to bullshit you, you’d have poked around until you turned up more inconsistencies. I figured I’d save you the trouble.”

  My hand was still shaking a little.

  Miles shrugged slightly. “Anyway, as soon as you called, I knew you were on the road to figuring it out. I could have dodged you if I’d wanted to.” He looked out at the water. “Truth is, I guess I just wanted it off my chest. Confessional instinct, or something? Or maybe I wanted to gloat, let somebody know I got away with murder.” He made an ironic grimace that suggested this was not the reason at all. “Tell something like this to a priest or a psychiatrist, who the hell knows what’ll happen. But a lawyer?” He cocked his head slightly. “There’s only one thing you can trust a lawyer to do.”

  “What’s that?”

  “You sons of bitches’ll take a client’s secrets right to your grave.”

  Then he stood and walked off down the boardwalk, past the pretty maples and the amorous couples lying in the grass, growing smaller and smaller in the dying sunlight until finally I couldn’t see him anymore.

  I wanted to feel angry, but I didn’t, quite. What I felt—aside from the weak, shaky, feverish sensation that had settled over my body—was a terrible and general sadness that only deepened as the sun sank away and the river went dark.

  Miles put 221 Riverside Boulevard on the market a couple of days later, sold it to a sixteen-year-old rap star from Detroit, then moved out to LA. I saw him a couple of times on TV—Entertainment Tonight, that sort of thing—squiring bosomy young actresses around at movie openings.

  Then last week, page three of the Free Press: “Controversial Author Dies of Self-Inflicted Gunshot.”

  He told me he’d gotten away with murder. But who knows, maybe there’s no such thing—not in Miles Dane’s world anyway. As Daniel Rourke said on the stand: In the end, Miles Dane’s creations always got their just deserts.

  ALSO BY

  WILLIAM J. COUGHLIN

  Shadow of a Doubt

  The Judgment

  The Heart of Justice

  In the Presence of Enemies

  Death Penalty

  Her Honor

  Her Father’s Daughter

  The Twelve Apostles

  No More Dreams

  Day of Wrath

  The Stalking Man

  The Grinding Mill

  The Destruction Committee

  The Dividend Was Death

  The Widow Wondered Why

  ALSO BY

  WALTER SORRELLS

  Power of Attorney

  Will to Murder

  Cry for Justice

  WRITING AS RUTH BIRMINGHAM

  Atlanta Graves

  Fulton County Blues

  Sweet Georgia

  Blue Plate Special

  PROOF OF INTENT

  Copyright © 2002 by Ruth Coughlin and Walter Sorrells.

  Cover photo © Tom Hallman.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

  eISBN: 978-1-429-90323-3

  Date of eBook conversion: 07/16/2010

  St. Martin’s Press hardcover edition / November 2002

  St. Martin’s Paperbacks edition / December 2003

  St. Martin’s Paperbacks are published by St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

 

 

 


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