Authors: Laura Caldwell
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Murder, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Suspense fiction, #New York (N.Y.), #Women lawyers
I burst out laughing. Maddy knew me implicitly, and that felt so damn good.
“I knew it. And then to top it off, you act like an intoxicated fool, and yet he doesn’t leave you in the street like he should have.”
Iacceptedaglassofwinefromthewaiter.“So?”
“So? He sounds like a gem. Why didn’t you kiss him and see if the whole world disappeared?”
Ishotheranexasperatedlook.Maddyknewabout myflimsytestfortruelove.Sometimes,IwishedI’d never told her about it. “I’d just met the guy!”
“When is the last time you had sex?”
“Oh, no. I’m not having this conversation.”
“Okay, fine. You don’t have to sleep with him anytime soon.”
“Gee, thanks.”
“But,” Maddy continued, “you should at least think seriously about dating him. He sounds like a prince.”
“Maddy, he’s a hotel owner in Michigan, and I’m an attorney in Manhattan. Does that sound like it’s going to work?”
“Never know until you try.”
I shook my head and fel silent while Maddy sipped her wine. I would never win the argument.
“When are you going to see him again?” Maddy said.
“Never? I don’t know.”
“Look, I’m not trying to bug you.”
I gave her another look.
“Okay, maybe I am.” Maddy gave me a devilish grin. “But just promise me you won’t dismiss this. Not yet. See what happens when you go back to Chicago.”
“Fine,”Isaidtogetheroffmyback.Theentrées arrived,andIcuttheseabassdownthemiddle,putting half of it on Maddy’s plate. I let myself think about Ty for a second. It wasn’t that I didn’t like him. If he lived in Manhattan, I’d probably be al overtheguy.Butthelongdistanceseemedtoogreat an obstacle, when I already had so many others.
“Al right,” Maddy said, a pleased little look on her face. “Glad we got that settled. Now keep going with your story.”
I told her about the letters from Del a and the dinner with the Mannings.
“Oh, God. That must have been horrible,” she said when she heard about the abuse suspicions Chief Manning had considered.
I didn’t let myself linger on the issue, because the truth was that the thought made me sick. “It wasn’t true, though,” I said. “That’s what Ty’s dad decided, he…” Something snagged in my mind.
Maddy looked up at me as my words trailed away. “What?” she said.
“I was thinking of my conversation with them.” I went quiet, making myself review that night and the exact words Chief Manning had said.
Maddy waved a hand in front of my face.
“Now that I think about it,” I said. “I don’t remember him saying he decided the abuse al egations weren’t true.”
“What did he say exactly?”
“She fel down the stairs.”
Maddy pursed her mouth in a suspicious smirk.
“I know, I know. It’s the classic line to cover up abuse, and Manning said he suspected my dad. It’s crazy, right?”
“Ridiculous! They obviously cleared him.”
“That’s the thing,” I said, returning in my mind to the Mannings’ snug kitchen and their painted wood table. “I asked Ty’s dad if they’d ruled him out, and he said, ‘I guess you could say that.’”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“I’m not sure.” I pushed my plate away, not hungry any longer. “At the time, I took it to mean that my dad was cleared of those suspicions. I mean, that’s how the conversation seemed, but now that I’m remembering it, Chief Manning didn’t real y say that.”
“Wel , this isn’t a deposition, Hailey. He wasn’t precise with his words, but I’m sure he meant he ruled your dad out. Otherwise they’d have pressed charges.”
“Right,” I said, wanting to believe her. “Right.” But something about Chief Manning’s response irked me.
“So keep going with your story,” Maddy said, pouring more wine.
I dragged my mind away from the Mannings’ kitchen and told Maddy about Portland, meeting Matt, and final y my conversation with the woman in Santa Fe, as wel as my phone cal s to the Albuquerque home of someone named Dan Singer.
“Geez,” she said. “You’ve been busy. So when are you going to Santa Fe?”
“What?”
“No one answers at Dan’s house, right? So you don’t even know if he’s in Albuquerque anymore. And that woman who had a kid with him isn’t going to talk to you on the phone. She’s hostile, and she’s had enough. If you happened to go to Santa Fe on business, though, if you just happened to cal from your hotel and say you’re stopping by, maybe she’d tel you what she knows.”
I thought for a second. “I like it, but I’m too crazy with the McKnight case.”
“You can work on planes. You can work in a hotel room. You’d probably get more done if you’re by yourself without the phones ringing and everybody around your firm talking about the partnership election.”
Maddy had a point. “Would you go with me?” I said, excited. “We could make it a girls’ trip.”
“Oh, sweetie. I would. You know I’d do anything for you, but I’ve been kind of busy myself.” Maddy wore a coy expression.
“What is it? I’m sorry I’ve been dominating the conversation.”
“Oh, shut up. My story’s not half as interesting.” But Maddy looked very interested. “I think I might be fal ing for someone.”
“What?” The word came out louder than I expected, and I noticed a few other diners turning their heads toward me. “You mean just
one
guy?”
Maddy had a big smile on her face now. “Yep.”
“Tel me!”
“Wel , he’s older.”
“Of course.” Maddy had a thing about older men, and as long as I had known her, she had mostly been interested in guys that were anywhere from five to twenty years her senior.
“A little older than usual, actual y.”
“He’s not seventy or something, is he?
Maddy laughed. “No. His name is Grant, and he’s in his fifties. Married once a long time ago, no kids.”
“Any issues with the wife? Was the divorce recent?”
“Oh, no. They were married and split before they were even thirty. He found the love of his life afterthedivorce,butsomethinghappenedwithher. I think he’s stil trying to get over it in some way.”
I held up my glass to her. “And you’re the perfect girl to help him with that.”
“Exactly!” she said, toasting with me.
We made our way through the bottle of wine, and Maddy gave me al the details about Grant, a business consultant from Boston who came to Manhattan often.
I let the warmth of the wine and the conversation fil me. I let Maddy’s familiar smile shine a light into my heart. And as I threw my head back and laughed with Maddy, I realized this was the first time I’d felt safe since I’d gone back to Woodland Dunes.
The rest of the week flew by. Magoo Barragan and I worked long into each evening, preparing a budget and trial analysis for Sean McKnight, while Natalie Decker focused on research.
I had returned to dealing exclusively with Beth Halverson at McKnight Corporation, making my life much more pleasant. By Thursday night, we’d finished the budget and analysis, and the three of us met to strategize.
“Al right, what next?” I said to them.
Magoo had pushed the files off my couch and stretched himself across it, his tie loosened to the point that it hung in a circle around his neck. Natalie sat on one of the chairs facing my desk.
“You pick,” Natalie said, running her hands through her black, razor-straight bob. “There are two mil ion things to do.” Her face was bland, though, as if two mil ion tasks weren’t necessarily insurmountable.
“I don’t know how we’l be ready in three and a half weeks,” Magoo said, throwing an arm over his face to block it from the light overhead.
Three and a half weeks. My stomach flipped. The thought of a big trial stil sent a charge of panic through me as the days drew nearer. During my first few years of practice, the firm had always made an older partner try any case with me. After a number of them, they agreed I could handle the cases by myself, and for the last two years, each trial was my own, although sometimes one of the attorneys from the group second-chaired it with me. It wasn’t as if I had been doing this for twenty years, though. I was even more nervous this time because I didn’t have my normal focus. Instead, I had spent half my brainpower wondering about my mother, the whereabouts of my siblings and the conversation I needed to have with my father.
I had tried to talk to him a few times since Tuesday, yet he was always at a meeting or running out to a deposition. But I knew that tonight he was having dinner with a client at his club in the city. He would be nearly done now, and I planned to head there as soon as I wrapped up the meeting.
“Let’s just break it down,” I said to Magoo and Natalie. “We’l go over each task, we’l prioritize, and divide them up.”
“Sure,” Natalie said, as if discussing whether or not to have breakfast tomorrow morning.
“Sounds good,” Magoo said.
We talked for another twenty minutes, listing the jobs that needed to be completed, debating which were more important than the others, until I had a neat, orderly inventory that made it more manageable. Magoo and Natalie volunteered for various jobs, and I printed each of them a copy of the list so we could al keep track.
By the time we were done, it was nearly nine-thirty. I knew my father would probably leave the club in fifteen minutes in order to catch the ten o’clock train to Long Island.
“I’ve got to run,” I said, grabbing a stack of file foldersoffthedesk.“I’l finishupathometonight.”
“See ya,” Magoo said with a wave. Natalie shrugged.
Soon, I was in a cab, headed toward midtown and the Van Newton Guild, a stuffy, antique-fil ed private club that admitted only men until about a decade ago, when a lawsuit forced them to accept women, as wel . As far as I could tel , few women had taken advantage of the new membership policy. My father found the place as pretentious and old-fashioned as I did, but many of his longtime clients dined there, so he kept his membership current and made appearances when needed.
A liveried doorman dressed in a crimson jacket with gold epaulets opened the door. Inside, a long stretchofgrayandwhitemarbleledtoadeskwhere members and guests were required to check in. As I walked down the hal , I felt as I always did when I was here, as if I was sneaking into a museum after hours, and any minute someone would politely ask me to leave. I tried to step lightly, but my heels kept making succinct clicks on the marble.
“I’m here to see Wil Sutter. I believe he’s in the dining room,” I said to the man behind the desk. He was a bespectacled guy about my age who was probably getting a doctorate in medieval poetry during the day. The Van Newton Guild always hired academics with no personal skil s.
“Name?” he asked with no hint of a smile.
“Hailey Sutter.”
The clerk barely gave me a nod before cal ing the dining room. He turned his back and spoke in low tones as if imparting a state secret to the maître d’ upstairs. I glanced at my watch: 9:45 p.m. Hopeful y, I hadn’t missed him.
“Mr. Sutter wil see you in the bar,” the clerk said, turning to face me again. “I’l cal someone to escort you.”
“I know where it is,” I said. I moved toward the elevator hidden in the side wal .
“Miss!” the clerk cal ed out. “Club rules!”
I groaned and waited a ful minute before another bespectacled academic took me into the elevator and upstairs to the bar, which was more like a library. Paneled with inlaid bookshelves that housed leather-covered tomes, the room was my favorite in the club since it actual y seemed somewhat inviting rather than pompous. I saw my father immediately, sitting at a game table with another man at the far side of the room. When he spotted me, a wide smile formed on his face.
“I’l take it from here,” I said to my escort. But he insisted on walking me over to my father and formal y announcing me.
“Miss Hailey Sutter,” the man said, before he gave a short bow and disappeared.
My dad laughed at my annoyance. “Hi, sweetie,” he said. He stood to kiss me on the cheek.
He introduced me to Mack Randal , the head of a trading operation, which my father had represented for about fifteen years. Mack excused himself almost immediately, saying he had to get home to his wife.
“Youcametohaveachatwithyourolddad?”My fathergesturedtowardthechairMackhadvacated.
I sank into it. “Yes, actual y, I did. Are you trying to catch the ten o’clock?”
“I can get the next one.”
“Great,” I said. But didn’t know where to start. Luckily, a waiter came over, and I ordered a coffee with skim milk.
I shifted in my chair, and as I did so, I noticed that a glass with ice and amber-colored liquid sat before my father. Whiskey, I realized.
This was truly odd, a sign of something off, because my dad never drank. He had grown up in Kansas on his parents’ farm. It was an ideal childhood until one particularly bad flood kil ed the farm, and his parents started drinking. The alcohol wrecked them, he had told me. It had wrecked their family, and he wouldn’t continue that legacy.
I looked at the glass again, then met his gaze and raised my eyebrows.
What’s up with that?
Sometimes we didn’t have to talk to communicate.
He shrugged, then again.
Nothing. Nothing important.
I let it go. While I waited for my coffee, we made light conversation, my father tel ing me about a lawsuit Mack’s company was involved in. My coffee seemed to arrive too fast, and my father stopped, waiting for me to begin.
“I have some questions,” I said. I took a sip from the porcelain cup and tried not to make a face. The Van Newton Guild was not known for its culinary excel ence.
“Okay. What’s this about?”
I fel quiet. How to summarize this? Just start at the beginning. “It’s about Mom.”
My father didn’t respond immediately. The word
Mom
hung in the air.
“Al right.” His voice sounded wary, or maybe I imagined it.
I took another sip of the coffee, but this time, I barely noticed how horrid it was. Instead, I was simply happy to have something to do with my hands, anything that could pass a little time until I figured out how to broach this topic that had been hidden for so long.