Read The Divorce Papers: A Novel Online
Authors: Susan Rieger
Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Humorous, #Literary
Matter of Durkheim
From: Sophie Diehl To: David Greaves cc: Hannah Smith Date: Wed, 24 Mar 1999 18:26:22 Subject: Matter of Durkheim | 3/24/99 6:26 PM |
David—
I’ll need help with the Durkheim divorce. Will you do it? Felix? I don’t think Fiona would want the job, but I may be wrong. What are the next steps?
Sophie
TRAYNOR, HAND, WYZANSKI
222 CHURCH STREET
NEW SALEM, NARRAGANSETT 06555
(393) 876-5678
MEMORANDUM
Attorney Work Product
From: | David Greaves |
To: | Sophie Diehl |
RE: | Matter of Durkheim: Attorney Assignment; Use of Email; Meeting |
Date: | March 24, 1999 |
Attachments: | |
Hannah printed out your email. I’ll work with you on the Durkheim case. Felix is up to his ears in divorces at the moment, and, as you wrote, Fiona is not a good choice. It wouldn’t work well, a junior associate taking the lead over a junior partner. I’ll explain it to her.
We should meet this Friday to talk about the case. (I’ll be out of the office tomorrow.) What about 3 p.m. in my office? In the meantime, look over some of the separation agreements we have in the files. In addition to the Habermans’, I recommend the Colliers’, Jason and Rebecca Peele’s, the Crawfords’, and the Goldsteins’. And, most important, the Peele file, in its entirety. Kahn & Boyle were the attorneys for Jason Peele. They play by their own rules. You should know what you’re up against. They’re not good lawyers, only mean ones, but the latter often passes for the former.
In the future, please do not use email to discuss a case, no matter how insignificant the information you are conveying may strike you. I have thought about this a good deal; I am not simply being a Luddite. I recognize email’s uses, but I persist in thinking that most communications between attorneys and between attorneys and their clients should not be transmitted electronically. It’s too easy for email to be misdirected, forwarded, hacked into. There is always the risk that someone other than the designated recipient will read your email. I worry not only that confidentiality will be broken but that by using email, we are playing
fast and loose with the lawyer-client privilege and possibly forfeiting claims to protected attorney work product. Have you been following the Microsoft antitrust trial? Microsoft was hoisted on its own petard. There was a mountain of incriminating emails. Fitting in that case, perhaps, but not ours. I recognize that your message could compromise no one, but I would prefer that we stick to interoffice memoranda.
Re: Re: Advice Sought | |
From: Sophie Diehl To: Maggie Pfeiffer Date: Wed, 24 Mar 1999 18:36:57 Subject: Re: Re: Advice Sought | 3/24/99 6:36 PM |
Oh, Maggie,
I can’t believe I ever had a crush on that man. What a skunk. Boy, did he have me snookered. I sent him an email saying I’d take on the case and got back a lecture on emails and the threat they pose to the attorney-client privilege. It was so infuriating. I know the rules—and the risks. There was nothing in my email that compromised anyone or anything. (Just my luck, he’ll intercept THIS email.) And, he never said “Thank you,” or “I know this is not something you signed on for.” Of course, if he doesn’t recognize a debt to me, then it doesn’t exist. And then there’s Fiona; she’s not going to take this well. I can hear her now: “You Yale Law grads knock me out. There’s nothing you can’t do. Habeas corpus with the right hand, alimony with the left.” She’ll no doubt accuse me of poaching her case. This is a royal screwing.
I’ll drop by your rehearsal around 9:30 on Friday. I can’t wait to meet this Harry fellow. Is he more Rochester or Heathcliff?
Love,
Sophie
P.S. Would I have had a crush on DG if he didn’t look like Jeff Bridges? (Rhetorical question. Don’t answer. My chronic weakness for sturdy men. And Starman Bridges NOT Lebowski.)
Join the E-Generation
From: Sophie Diehl To: David Greaves cc: Hannah Smith Date: Thu, 25 Mar 1999 10:10:16 Subject: Join the E-Generation | 3/25/99 10:10 AM |
Dear David—
Millennium Approaches. I think it’s time you bit the dumdum and entered the electronic age. We don’t need to be bombarding each other with constant streams of memoranda—like 18th-century courtiers sending notes round by hand. All that letterhead paper, filing, etc. I will make a promise. I will never send you an email that couldn’t be read by either opposing counsel or your mother. (The two negatives make an intended positive.) Email is very useful for making appointments, sending reminders, and the like. And if you want to make an email part of the record, you can print it out and have Hannah file it.
I won’t be able to make the Friday appointment. I’ll be out of the office all day, interviewing possible witnesses for the Trilling case. How about Monday morning? I can do anytime until 1 pm when I’ve got to leave for an evidentiary hearing.
I’m cc’ing Hannah so she can check your calendar.
Yours,
Sophie
P.S. Atticus as Jewish. I need to see that. I have seen
The Third Man
. It’s my mother’s second-favorite movie after
Smiles of a Summer Night
. I’ve also seen
Paths of Glory
, which is my father’s favorite movie, not counting
Chariots of Fire
, that great British weeper. So, do you watch
The Simpsons
?
Mr. Watson, Come Here
From: David Greaves To: Sophie Diehl Date: Fri, 26 Mar 1999 18:32:11 Subject: Mr. Watson, Come Here | 3/26/99 6:32 PM |
Dear Sophie—
I hope your Trilling interviews went well. I’ve slotted you in at 9:30 Monday. Do you check your email over the weekend?
What do you think of my maiden email? I was taken by your lavish style—especially after that first terse, unfriendly (probably, deservedly so) message. What with the courtiers, the dumdums, and the bombarding streams, I was immersed in a soup of metaphors. Will email do this to me, too?
You might be interested to know that my mother is not a prig; I can’t imagine anything you’d say in your most indiscreet moments that would shock her. She’s like Grace Kelly’s mother in
To Catch a Thief
, very down-to-earth, a bourbon drinker. You’d like her. She’d like you. My starchiness can’t be laid at her feet.
I am sorry you’ve been roped into this matter. I know I promised. At the very least, I should have asked you in person.
David
P.S. I know who the Simpsons are. I have sons, remember.
P.P.S. Don’t think I didn’t catch the Tony Kushner reference. I think
Angels in America
is the great American play of the second half of the 20th century. First half:
A Streetcar Named Desire
.
Men
From: Sophie Diehl To: Maggie Pfeiffer Date: Sat, 27 Mar 1999 11:32:54 Subject: Men | 3/27/99 11:32 AM |
Mags—
I am wiped out. I crawled in at 4 a.m. I haven’t stayed out, let alone up, that late since your wedding. What can I say? Harry is terrific. I could fall for him, heavily and physically. I didn’t see any of his dark, brooding side. Probably blinded by those shoulders. He was funny, smart, interesting—and interested. He liked my client stories, especially the Trilling saga; but then what’s not to like about a case where a sociopath kills his neighbor because his Pekinese shat on his lawn? I’m seeing him again tonight after the rehearsal. My fantasy life may start taking a backseat to my real one. Although that has been resurrected. I’ve resumed my crush on DG. He wrote me an email in his old unconsciously (?) flirtatious way. Or, maybe not. Maybe he was just being teasing and playful.
I have to go into the office this afternoon to work on the Trilling case and tidy up my regular workload, since on Monday I begin divorce detail. I’ll see you this evening. I’ll come by at the end of rehearsal to watch the last act. I think the play will be a great success and you are wonderful as Annie, though not very likable. It’s interesting that a play about love is about adultery. I know you can’t do a marriage play without adultery—no plot—but there are less cruel ways of doing it (though no doubt less dramatically interesting). Perhaps for Stoppard, only the love for children is the real thing. My favorite bit is the second scene, where the playwright’s first wife says about him and their daughter: “He’s in love with his [daughter].” (I’m improvising.) And you (second wife) say: “Isn’t that normal?” And the ex-wife says: “Normal is the other way round.” I wonder why he
picked this play? Does it resonate with anyone who wasn’t divorced or whose parents weren’t divorced? I’m thinking I should send my new client and her husband (and his new sweetheart) complimentary tickets to your play. I’m also thinking I should stop fantasizing about Mrs. Greaves’s husband. God, he’s as old as my father. I am disgusting.
But then there’s Harry. Do you know when I saw him, I could feel the hairs on the back of my neck bristling? I haven’t felt that way since 11th grade when I sat across the aisle from Jack in the theater class at Collegiate. I used to think I’d fall off my chair. I’d lost all will; I was pure desire—and desire couldn’t sit up straight or pay attention to
Joe Egg
. Do we ever feel that intensely again? No. Only teenagers kill themselves for love; Maman says, Anna threw herself under the train not because she lost Vronsky but because she lost her son. There we are again: the love for children.
I need more sleep.
Kiss Matt for me. Love,
Sophie
Hello
From: Harry Mortensen To: Sophie Diehl Date: Sat, 27 Mar 1999 15:01:53 Subject: Hello | 3/27/99 3:01 PM |
Sweet Sophie—How are you feeling? Did you get any sleep? I’m wrecked. And you did it. You are coming by rehearsal tonight, aren’t you? It should be over by 12:30, but you’re welcome anytime.
Harry
TRAYNOR, HAND, WYZANSKI
222 CHURCH STREET
NEW SALEM, NARRAGANSETT 06555
(393) 876-5678
MEMORANDUM
Attorney Work Product
From: | Sophie Diehl |
To: | David Greaves |
RE: | Matter of Durkheim |
Date: | March 29, 1999 |
Attachments: | |
At our meeting this morning, we discussed the next steps to be taken in the Durkheim case. In the next few days, I shall attend to the matters that need attending to and do more reading and research. You will deal with Fiona in a way that will mitigate any ill feelings this assignment may have inadvertently engendered.
Matters That Need Attending:
1.
Letter to Mrs. Durkheim/Addendum to the Fee Agreement
I shall write Mrs. Durkheim today explaining the conditions under which I will represent her. I shall advise her against using me and give her many cogent reasons why you or Fiona would better serve her (never mentioning my own disinclination). I shall say that if against advice of counsel, she still wants me to represent her, I will do my best. I will also say that because of my inexperience, I will regularly consult with you to make sure that she is getting the best legal advice. If she chooses to retain me, I shall ask her to sign an
Addendum to the Fee Agreement
, which spells out that she will be charged for your time as well as mine. We agree that it is better that I write the letter. Mrs. Durkheim might interpret a letter from you to that effect as patronizing, insensitive, and dismissive. (“Father’s Lawyer Knows Best.”)
2.
Notice of Appearance; Acceptance of Service; Answer to Complaint
We need to accept service and file a Notice of Appearance with the Court and K&B; we should also answer the complaint: nothing too specific, boilerplate.
3.
Discovery
After the matter of representation is fixed, we need to begin discovery. Mrs. Durkheim is in the process of assembling a financial history of her marriage and a proposed post-divorce budget for herself and her daughter. She does not believe it will be difficult to assemble the information and supporting documentation. She handled the family finances, kept the books, paid the bills. She doesn’t believe her husband has any hidden assets. Is she being naïve? Doesn’t she know about the Caymans? When we have a better idea of income and expenses, assets and liabilities, we can begin to formulate an offer.
4.
Motion for Temporary Support
Mrs. Durkheim’s current income will not support her and her daughter. While her father would no doubt help her out until a settlement is reached, we should probably begin to think about making a motion for temporary support. In the Peele case you had me read, Jason Peele (a K&B client) closed the joint checking account, canceled his wife’s credit cards, and emptied out the safe deposit box—a week after the summons was served. And she had no job at all.
5.
Continued Residence in the Family Home
Even if she doesn’t want to, Mrs. Durkheim needs to stay put in the family home until a settlement is reached. It can’t look as though she’s abandoned him. Also, since he’s so attached to the house, it may provide us with some leverage in the negotiations. We need to be vigilant here. Before he made any kind of offer of settlement, Jason Peele made a motion to exclude his wife
and children
from the family residence and changed the locks.