Authors: Phillip Margolin
Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Legal, #General, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Fiction
A poster boy for the American Dream, former blue collar boy turned high-powered lawyer Daniel Ames is on easy street as an associate at Reed, Briggs, Portland’s most prestigious law firm.
Until one man…and one case…changes everything.
When a charismatic lawyer sues the firm’s biggest client, a pharmaceutical company, for manufacturing a drug that causes unspeakable birth defects, Daniel believes the case has no merit. But when information implicating company malfeasance surfaces, the intrepid lawyer doggedly scrambles to find the truth--an investigation that leads him into a vortex of greed, corruption, deceit, and murder. Suddenly caught on the wrong side of the law and in the crosshairs of a powerful enemy, Daniel must unmask an evil conspiracy that wants to bury a deadly secret…and Daniel with it.
I owe a debt of gratitude to the many people who volunteered their time and ideas to help me write this book. Since science has never been my strong point, I am tremendously grateful to Dr. Lynn Loriaux, who invented the fictional drug Insufort for me and answered many other science questions. Dr. John Lundy and Dr. Karen Gunson, the Oregon State Medical Examiner, taught me how human remains are identified. Ed Pritchard was my computer guru.
I received invaluable information about the life of an associate at a major law firm from Alison Brody, an associate at Portland’s Miller, Nash law firm, and Scott Crawford, Mike Jacobs, Melissa Robertson, Bryan Geon, Sharon Hill, Richard Vangelisti, Maria Gorecki, associates at the Stoel, Rives law firm in Portland. I also want to thank Stoel, Rives partners, Randy Foster and Barnes Ellis. I want to make sure that my readers understand that the Reed, Briggs firm in
The Associate
is an invention and that the partners and associates in it are not based on any real person.
Mike Williams and Jonathan Hoffman are exceptional attorneys who are regularly involved in the high-stakes civil litigation that forms the backdrop for this book. I am very grateful to them for walking me through the steps the plaintiffs’ and defendants’ attorneys take in a product liability case.
I also received invaluable technical assistance from Mike Shinn, Dan Bronson, Mark Anderson, Chip Horner, Steve Millen of Riverview Cemetery, Dr. Nathan Selden, Detective Sergeant Jon F. Rhodes of the Portland Police Bureau, Sergeant Mary Lindstrand of the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office, and my good friend Vince Kohler.
Thanks also to my fantastic children, Ami and Daniel; Johnathan Hoffman and Richard Vangelisti; as well as Joe, Eleonore, Jerry and Judy Margolin, and Norman and Helen Stamm for their valuable comments on my first draft.
I have to thank Dan Conaway, my intrepid editor for his insights. I am truly lucky to work with him. I am also very lucky to have Jean Naggar and everyone at her agency on my side.
People are always asking me where I get my ideas. In the case of
The Associate
there is an easy answer. Doreen, my incredible wife of more than thirty years, dreamed up the plot device that is at the heart of this book. I can’t tell you what it is, because I don’t want to ruin any surprises, but it’s pretty clever, as is she.
An icy wind whipped down Mercer Street, rattling awnings, scattering paper scraps and raking Gene Arnold’s cheeks raw. He turned up his coat collar and ducked his head to avoid the arctic chill. This wasn’t the Arizona lawyer’s first visit to New York City, but it was his first winter visit and he was unprepared for the biting cold.
Arnold was an unremarkable man, someone you could sit opposite for an hour and not remember five minutes later. He was of average height, tortoiseshell glasses magnified his brown eyes, and his small, bald head was partially ringed by a fringe of dull gray hair. Arnold’s private life was as placid as his personality. He was unmarried, read a lot, and the most exciting thing he did was play golf. Nothing that had happened to him had even registered as a blip on the world’s radar screen except for a tragedy he had endured seven years before.
Arnold’s law practice was as tedious as his life, business transactions mostly. He was in New York to secure financing for Martin Alvarez, the king of the Arizona used car market, who wanted to expand into New Mexico. Arnold’s successful meeting with a potential investor had ended sooner than expected, leaving him time to wander around SoHo in search of a painting he could add to his small collection of art.
Arnold’s eyes teared and his nose started to run as he looked around desperately for shelter from the wind. An art gallery on the corner of Mercer and Spring streets was open and he ducked into it, sighing with relief when a blast of warm air greeted him. A thin young woman dressed in black was leaning on a counter near the front of the store. She looked up from the catalog she was reading.
“Can I help you?” she asked, flashing him a practiced smile.
“Just looking,” Arnold answered self-consciously.
The art hanging on the white walls of the gallery did not fit into one category. Arnold glanced briefly at a series of collages with a feminist theme before stopping to admire some paintings that were more his style. Back home he owned several western scenes, brown and red mesas at sunset, cowboys on the trail, that sort of thing. These landscapes were of New England, seascapes really. Dories on a raging ocean, waves breaking on a deserted beach, a cottage scarred by the sea’s salt spray. Very nice.
Arnold wandered over to a group of black-and-white photographs entitled
Couples.
The first grainy shot showed two teenagers holding hands in a park. They were viewed from behind, leaning into each other, their heads almost touching. The photographer had captured their intimate moment perfectly. The picture made Arnold sad. He would have given anything to be that boy with that girl. Being alone was the hardest thing.
The next photo showed a black couple sitting in a café. They were laughing, his head thrown back, mouth open, she smiling shyly, delighted that she was the source of such joy.
Arnold studied the photo. It wasn’t the type of art that he usually purchased, but there was something about the photograph that drew him to it. He checked the information on the small, white rectangle next to the photo and learned that the photographer was Claude Bernier and the price was within his means.
Arnold moved to the third photograph in the series. It showed a man and a woman dressed for the rain striding across a square in the center of some city. They were angry, faces tight. The woman’s eyes blazed, the man’s mouth was a grim line.
“Oh, my God,” Arnold said. He fell forward, bracing himself against the wall.
“Sir?” The young woman was staring at him, alarmed by his ashen pallor and his inability to stand upright. Arnold stared back, panicky, light-headed.
“Are you okay?”
Arnold nodded, but the woman was unconvinced. She hurried forward and slipped a hand under his elbow.
“Is there someplace I can sit down?” he asked weakly.
The woman led him up front to a chair behind the counter. Arnold sagged onto it and put his hand to his forehead.
“Can I get you some water?” she asked anxiously.
Arnold saw that she was trying to hold it together. He imagined that she was thinking “heart attack” and wondering what it would be like to sit with a corpse while she waited for the police.
“Water would be good. I’m okay, really. Nothing to worry about,” he said, trying to reassure her. “I’m just a little dizzy.”
By the time the woman returned with the water Arnold had regained his composure. He took two sips and breathed deeply. When he looked up the woman was watching him and worrying her hands.
“I’m much better.” He gave her a weak smile. “I’m just not used to this cold.”
“Please, sit here as long as you want.”
“Thanks.” He paused, then pointed toward the exhibit. “The photographer, Bernier, does he live near here?”
“Claude? Sure. He’s got a walk-up in Chelsea.”
“I want to buy one of his pictures.”
Arnold stood up slowly, steadier now, and led the woman to the photograph of the angry couple. As he crossed the room doubts assailed him, but they melted away as he drew closer to the scene that Bernier had captured.
“Do you think he’d see me today?” Arnold asked as he produced a credit card without moving his eyes from the photo.
The woman looked worried. “Do you feel up to it?”
Arnold nodded. She seemed on the verge of trying to change his mind. Then she carried the photograph to the front to ring up the purchase. As she waited for clearance from the credit-card company she used the phone. Arnold sat down again. His initial shock had abated and had been replaced by a sense of urgency and purpose.
“Claude can see you anytime,” the woman told him as she handed Arnold his purchase and stationery from the gallery bearing the photographer’s address and phone number. He memorized the address and placed the paper in his jacket pocket.
“Thank you. You’ve been very kind,” he told the salesclerk before stepping into the street. A frigid wind greeted him, but Gene Arnold was too distracted to notice.
The headlight beams of Dr. Sergey Kaidanov’s battered SAAB bounced off a stand of Douglas firs then came to rest on the unpainted wall of a one-story, cinderblock building buried in the woods several miles from downtown Portland. As soon as Kaidanov unlocked the front door of the building the rhesus monkeys started making that half-cooing, half-barking sound that set his nerves on edge. The volume of noise increased when Kaidanov flipped on the lights.
Most of the monkeys were housed in two rooms at the back of the building. Kaidanov walked down a narrow hall and stood in front of a thick metal door that sealed off one of the rooms. He slid back a metal sheet and studied the animals through the window it concealed. There were sixteen rhesus monkeys in each room. Each monkey was in its own steel mesh cage. The cages were stacked two high and two across on a flatcar with rollers. Kaidanov hated everything about the monkeys—their sour, unwashed smell, the noises they made, the unnerving way they followed his every move.
As soon as Kaidanov’s face was framed in the window, the monkey two from the door in the top cage leaped toward him and stared him down. Its fur was brownish gray and it gripped the mesh with hands containing opposable thumbs on both arms and legs. This was the dominant monkey in the room and it had established its dominance within three weeks even though there was no way it could get at the others.