Part 12 (1/2)

'Yes, it is,' I said. 'And he's probably right. I mean, I liked trying cases. Getting up in front of a jury. Waving my hands around. Seeing if I could make them love me. But n.o.body's sure I can handle the stress anymore and stay sober. Including me. Without that, I don't like it all. I'm just hooked on the money.'

I felt bruised, lying there, pounding myself with the truth. But I knew I was on the mark. Money was worse than booze or cocaine. G.o.d, it could just go in the sweet rush of spending. You start visiting the tailor, buy the Beemer, maybe pick up a little country house, find a club or two not picky enough to keep you out. Next thing you know, two sixty-eight before taxes, and you're looking in the b.u.t.ton drawer for coins to pay your bridge tolls. Not to mention being a drunk who used to arrive home routinely, pulling my pockets inside out under the light of my front porch, wondering, sort of abstractly, where it was all those twenties went. (As well as my house keys, which on one occasion I eventually realized I'd thrown into the tin cup of some beggar.) Now I had an ex with a nice German car and a house in the country and G.o.d to thank that I paid alimony and had something to show for the money I made.

'We all are,' she said. 'Hooked. To some extent. It's part of the life.'

'No,' I said. You meant what you told Pagnucci. You love it. You love G & G. You'd work there for free.'

She made a face, but I had her nailed and she knew it.

'What is it?' I asked. 'Seriously. I never got it. To me, you know, all these lawsuits, it's my robber baron's better than your robber baron. What do you get off on? The law?'

'The law. Sure.' She nodded, mostly to herself. 'I mean, all this right and wrong. It's nifty.' '”Nifty”?'

She came over and lay beside me, belly down. She had those bandy legs and her bad skin, but she looked awfully good to me, a perky little derriere. I patted her rear and she smiled. The flag was unfurling again, but I knew it was no use. Besides, she had her mind on the law now, and that, as I'd told her, was really the love of her life.

'It's the whole thing,' she said, 'all of it. Money. The work. The world. You know how it is when you're a child, you want to live in a fairy tale, you want to play house with Snow White, and I mean, here I am, hanging out with all of these people I read about in the Journal and the business pages of the Tribune.' Brushy, Wash, Martin, all of them, they kept track of the movements of big-time corporate America - financings, acquisitions, promotions - avid as soap opera fans, gobbling up the Journal and the local business press every morning with a hunger I felt only for the sports page.

'Like Krzysinski.'

She darted a warning look at me but answered straight.

'Like Krzysinski. And they like me, these people. And I like them. I mean, I think about what a mess I was when I got here. I was the only female lawyer in Litigation and I was scared to death. Remember?'

'Couldn't forget.' She had been on fire in the self-consuming fas.h.i.+on of the sun. Brushy knew she was a woman in a man's world - just ahead of the female gold rush to law school - and she confronted her prospects with a combustive emotional mix of h.e.l.l-bent determination and ravaging anxiety. She was the only girl in a family of five, born plug in the middle, and her situation here matched something that had faced her at home, some yes-and-no game she was always playing with herself. She'd do something brilliant, then come to one of her confidants - me or somebody else - and explain, with utmost sincerity, how it had all been accidental and would never be repeated, how she felt doomed by the expectations created by her own success. It was exhausting - and painful - just to listen to her, but even then I felt drawn to her, the way certain free molecules always react. I shared, I suppose, all these alternate moods, the brashness, the fear, the inclination to first blame myself.

'And now. All these people - they need me. I did this piece of takeover litigation for Nautical Paper a couple of years ago. My father worked there for a while, you know decades ago, but after we'd won the case I got this note from Dwayne Gandolph, the CEO, thanking me for the great work I'd done. It made me dizzy. Like inhaling Benzedrine. I brought it to my folks' home and we all pa.s.sed it around the dinner table and looked at it. The entire family was impressed with me - I was impressed with me.'

I understood what she was saying, perhaps more than she did, that her members.h.i.+p in this world was too hard-won not to be valued, too much a symbol to her to be understood as anything else. But she was smiling at herself for the moment. Gosh, she was great. We both thought so. I admired her enormously, the distances she'd dragged herself and her baggage. I gave her a smooch and we lay there necking for maybe ten minutes, two grown-ups, both of them naked in the daylight in a G.o.dd.a.m.n hotel room, just kissing and touching hands. I held her awhile, then she told me we had to go. There was G & G, the office, work to do.

We both laughed when she poked her fist through the hole in her panty hose. She put them on anyway and asked how I was doing finding Bert.

'I'm not going to find him,' I said. She went quizzical and I told her what I hadn't yet said to anyone else - that I thought Bert was dead.

'How could Bert be dead?' she asked. 'Who has the money?' It required only an instant, I noted, for her to reach the question that had come to me after a week.

'It's an interesting window of opportunity, isn't it?'

She had sat down in the chair again, half-dressed and posed against the fancy brocade. I loved looking at her.

'You mean,' she said, 'if somebody knew Bert was dead, they could blame it on him?'

'That's what I mean.' I was off the bed, stepping into my trousers. 'But they'd have to know,' I said. 'They couldn't be guessing. If Bert shows up again, they'd look pretty bad.'

'Well, how would they be sure?' I looked at her.

'You mean someone killed him? From the firm? You don't believe that.'

I didn't, in fact. There was logic to it, but little sense. I told her that.

'These are just theories, right? Bert being dead? All of it?' She wanted more than my rea.s.surance. She was being her true self, relentless, beating the idea to death like a snake.

'Those are theories,' I told her, 'but listen to this.' I told her then about my meetings yesterday, first with Jake, then with the Committee. This time I caught her off guard. She sat far forward, her mouth formed in a small perfect o. She was too distressed to feign valiance.

'Never,' she said finally. 'They'll never agree to something like that. That kind of cover-up. They have too much character.'

'Wash?' I asked. 'Pagnucci?'

'Martin?' she responded. Brushy's reverence for Martin was even greater than mine. 'You'll see,' she said. 'They'll do the right thing.'

I shrugged. She could be right, and even if she wasn't, she was improved by thinking the best of her partners. But she could see she hadn't really persuaded me.

'And Jake,' she said, 'my G.o.d, how sleazy. What's wrong with him?'

'You just don't know Jake. If you'd grown up with him, you'd see another side.'

'Meaning?'

'I could tell you stories.' I fumbled in her purse for a cigarette. I was tempted to tell her about the bar exam, but realized on second thought that she'd think less of me than Jake.

'You don't trust him, right? That's what you're suggesting. He wasn't brought up to be trustworthy?'

'I know him. That's all.'

In the green chair, she was stilled by disquiet.

'You don't like Jake, do you? I mean, all that palling around with him. That's bull, isn't it?'

'Who wouldn't like Jake? Rich, good-looking, charming. Everyone likes Jake.'

'You've got a chip on your shoulder about Jake. It's obvious.'

'All right. I have a chip on my shoulder about a lot of things.'

'Don't wait for me to say you're wrong.'

'I'm bitter and petty, right?' She could tell what I was thinking: I'd heard the tune before, someone else had sung the words, another chanteuse.

'I would never say petty. Look, Mack, he's lucky. In life, some people are lucky. You can't sit around despising good fortune.'

'Jake is a coward. He's never had the b.a.l.l.s to face what he should have. And I let him make me a coward with him. That's the part that frosts me.'

'What are you talking about?'

'Jake.' I looked at her hard. I could feel myself turning mean, Bess Malloy's son, and she saw it too. She stepped into her pumps and fixed the clasp on her purse. She'd been warned off.

'This is attorney-client, right?' she finally asked. 'All of this. About Jake saying not to tell?' She wasn't being humorous. She meant that the communication was privileged. That she was forbidden to repeat it, to TN or anyone else, and thus that BAD could never criticize her for failing to come forward, as, ethically, each of us was obliged to do.

'That's right, Brushy, you're covered. There's no s.h.i.+t on your shoes.'

'That's not what I meant.'