Mason continued. "This isn't about a partner who died in his sleep. It's about a murder investigation going on in the middle of a criminal investigation of this firm. If I'm going to run this show, then I'm going to make the staffing decisions. I'll lose my credibility if I lose my independence."
Scott swallowed hard. "You're right, of course. You won't get anywhere with St. John if he thinks you're shilling for Sullivan. Meeting adjourned."
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Sandra Connelly followed Mason into his office and closed the door.
"Nicely done, Louis. I didn't think you had the balls."
"Thanks for the endorsement. I need you. You cut through the crap and get to the bottom line. I don't care if you like me. That's not required. Now, which of the associates do you think we should use?"
She folded her arms and gave him an appraising look as if she'd never seen him before. Mason wondered if she really thought he'd been ballsy or whether he put her on the team as a prelude to surrendering to her.
"Phil Rosa is the best litigation associate we've got. He's a workhorse and he never misses anything in his research. Maggie Boylan is the top corporate associate."
"Sounds good. Assemble all of the O'Malley files, including personal files from everyone's offices, in the thirty-first-floor conference room. Lock the door. Skip Sullivan's office. We'll do that together. There'll be no more solo searches."
"You may have some pretty big balls after all," she said on her way out.
Mason pounded down the internal staircase to the thirty-first-floor office of Angela Molina, the firm's executive administrator. Angela could figure more angles than Rubik's Cube had, and she used them to squeeze every penny of profit out of the practice and into the partners' pockets. Together with a legendary office intelligence system, she kept things on an even keel. Angela had jet-black wavy hair, olive skin, and a fiery disposition. She was attractive, divorced, and in her midforties. Office gossip linked her with Sullivan. But that story followed most women who worked for the firm.
She and Mason hadn't gotten off on the right foot when he insisted on bringing his custom-made furniture that had to be bolted to the wall. Angela objected because it limited her options for future office assignments, one of her chief patronage plums. The initial chill between them had barely thawed over the last three months.
"Angela, I need your help. This is absolutely confidential. The firm has—"
"—been named a target of the grand jury's investigation into O'Malley, and you're in charge of the cleanup. What do you have left to tell me, Lou?"
Her instant intelligence bothered him, but he'd learned a long time ago that there are no secrets in a law office, especially one managed by Angela Molina.
"Change the locks on Sullivan's office and the thirty-first-floor conference room. Sandra Connelly and I get the only keys. Don't have the property manager do it. I don't want any passkeys floating around."
"O'Malley's property managers won't like it if they can't get into that office to clean, and they'll complain about security."
"Your job is to make them like it, and I know you have the charm to do it. I want the locks changed by noon. Send out a memo that those rooms are off-limits except to authorized personnel."
"Who are?"
"Sandra Connelly, Phil Rosa, Maggie Boylan, and me. Anyone objects, tell them to talk to me."
Halfway out the door, he told her to send him copies of all the O'Malley bills for the last five years, including the most current, plus work in progress.
Mason's next stop was Scott's office. He was on the phone but waved him in with a signal that said to close the door. He hung up and unloaded.
"I thought we had a deal on how we would handle this. The last thing in the world I want is for that bitch Sandra to be involved. How could you pull a bonehead stunt like that?"
"St. John would rather have a live target than a dead one. You and Sullivan were joined at the hip, which means that you're available. I'm your friend. Sandra wouldn't piss on you if you were on fire. If she believes you're not involved, she'll have more credibility with St. John than I will."
"You're acting like you think I'm in trouble. That worries me."
"We're all in trouble. We've got to put some distance between you and our investigation. You and Harlan shouldn't be at the meeting with O'Malley except to make the introductions."
"Sounds like you've got it figured out." His shoulders drooped as if Mason had let the air out of him.
"Not even close, my friend; not even close."
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Mason was ten minutes late to the meeting with Victor O'Malley. Scott Daniels and Harlan Christenson were huddled at the far end of the conference room with O'Malley, a dark-suited trio talking in hushed voices to add weight to their words.
O'Malley had a face like an inflated punctuation mark. A scarred, bulbous nose testified to the hard knocks he'd taken. He had crisp eyes that missed nothing.
Mason knew his story. O'Malley was awarded the Silver Star in Vietnam when he led his platoon in a successful bloody attack on a hill controlled by heavily entrenched Vietcong. He liked to say that's when he learned the importance of location, after he built a banking and real estate empire in Kansas City. And, he would add, the importance of being willing to risk everything to survive.
Sandra Connelly was seated at the center of the conference table, her back to the door. Mason recognized O'Malley's son, Vic Jr., leaning over Sandra, trying to make conversation while he stole a glance down the front of her dress. When she didn't respond, he wandered back toward his father, who kept his back to him, barring Vic Jr. from his inner circle. He pretended not to notice by picking microscopic lint off his black silk shirt.
Vic Jr. had not climbed out of his father's gene pool. He was round-shouldered, with a powdery complexion, a sharp nose, and close-set eyes. He had a nocturnal look, as though he preferred foraging at night to sitting in the conference room. He was a shadow alongside his father, for whom he'd worked since graduating from college a few years earlier. Mason had met them once before. O'Malley had done the talking. Vic Jr. had done all the whining.
Mason cleared his throat. "Sorry I'm late."
O'Malley turned toward him, waving off any possible offense.
"Quite all right, Lou," he said, extending his hand as he walked toward him. "I was just telling Scott and Harlan how much I'm going to miss Richard. I depended on him very much. I don't know how to replace him."
O'Malley's two-handed greeting swallowed Mason's hand, though he struggled to return the intensity of his grip. At six-five, O'Malley took up a lot of space. His oversized ego filled the rest of the room. A heavy gold ring with the Marine Corps insignia flashed off his right hand.
"It won't be easy, but I'm sure Scott and Harlan will take good care of you."
"Of course, of course they will. So long as you keep me out of jail."
Harlan put his arms around Mason and O'Malley, forming a new circle. "Lou, I've told Victor that you and Sandra need to talk with him about the government's case and the subpoena for our records. Take good care of him. Victor has been very good to us."
They all laughed more than Harlan's comment deserved. Mason closed the door as Harlan and Scott left the conference room, then sat next to Sandra. Father and son took seats opposite them.
Mason led off. "Victor, did you know that Richard Sullivan and the firm were targets of the grand jury investigation?"
"Cut to the chase, eh? I like that, young man. Yes. Richard told me. He said it was a sign that St. John was desperate but that I didn't have anything to worry about. He said that you told him I was in the clear."
Mason studied O'Malley for some indication that O'Malley expected him to believe that story. O'Malley's face was a pool of calm water.
"We both know that's bullshit. You're smart enough to know how much trouble you're in. The U.S. attorney doesn't go after the defendant's lawyers unless he thinks he can squeeze them to turn on their client to save their own hides."
O'Malley didn't flinch. "Then suppose you tell me how much trouble I'm in."
"Here's what I know. Your bank loaned money to real estate partnerships you controlled that were in financial trouble. The bank never should have loaned the money because the partnerships couldn't pay the money back. You knew it and the bank knew it. The loans cost the bank fifty million. The government says that was criminal fraud."
"And my lawyer advised me that the loans were reasonable business investments that turned sour. That's not a crime."
"And I'm not the jury. Did your lawyer get any of that money before he turned up dead?"
"I'm sure Richard charged for his services and was paid."
"Did he collect for anything other than his legal fees?"
O'Malley offered a patient smile. "I didn't write the checks. You'd have to ask him."
"You begin to see the problem here, Victor. Richard Sullivan is dead. You haven't forgotten, have you?"
O'Malley's eyes narrowed and his congenial veneer evaporated.
"No, I haven't, young man. My friendship with Richard was the only reason I stuck with this firm and didn't hire a Wall Street heavyweight. I may have to rethink that now that he's gone."
"You may need a Wall Street firm sooner than you think. If the firm is indicted, we'll claim that we didn't know the true nature of your actions because you concealed them. The court will waive your attorney-client privilege, and we can fight over the movie rights."
O'Malley nodded. "All right. You've made your point. Better to hang together than separately. What else do you want to know?"
"St. John has subpoenaed our files on Quintex Land Corporation. I want to know why."
"I don't know. The bank didn't loan any money to Quintex."
"What does Quintex do?"
"I use it to buy and sell land."
"Scott said that Sullivan handled the real estate deals but that the company has made other investments besides real estate."
"Look, Richard set up more corporations for me than I could keep track of. I certainly can't remember every deal that I ever did. You've got the records. You figure it out and tell me if I've got another problem besides the loans."
Mason shook his head, realizing the struggle that lay ahead. O'Malley wasn't going to tell him anything he didn't have to. Mason couldn't blame him. They had met only once before. The lawyer O'Malley trusted was dead, and he hadn't decided whether he could trust Mason.
Mason and Sandra spent the next two hours hammering him on Quintex, but they didn't know enough to ask the right questions. They needed time to plow through all the material, so they scheduled another meeting for the following Monday afternoon.
"Well, what do you think?" Mason asked Sandra after O'Malley and his son left.
"No jury will ever believe that someone that successful could know so little about how he made all that money. He's not going to help us more than he has to."
"Doesn't he know that the harder he makes our job, the more likely it is that he gets convicted?"
"Maybe. Unless he's more worried about what the government doesn't know than what it does know. We better buy some time from St. John."
"Our appointment is at ten tomorrow morning. Let's have a look at Sullivan's office."
The locksmith was just finishing under Angela's watchful eye. She gave them the Girl Scout salute, handed each of them a key, and posted the
No Admittance
sign on the door.
"The office is secure, so let's leave it until tomorrow. Maybe we'll have a better idea of what we're looking for after we meet with St. John," Sandra said.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
When Mason returned to his office, he found six banker's boxes stacked against one wall. Each box was labeled
Douchant v. Philpott Safety Systems
. There was a note from Scott taped to one of the boxes that read,
A deal is a deal. Save the firm and take care of Tommy. Then take the rest of the day off.
Mason ran his hand over the boxes, deciding whether to open them. He knew that when he did, he'd have no more excuses to quit the firm or to blame the result in Tommy's trial on fickle courtroom gods. He used the letter opener Scott had given him for being best man in his wedding to cut the tape that held the lids on each box.
The first thing he saw was Tommy's safety belt, the Philpott Safety System logo embossed on the back. It was more harness than belt. Tommy wore it wrapped around his waist and between his legs. A six-foot rope called a lanyard was attached to the belt. A hook shaped like a giant safety pin was attached to the other end of the rope.
Tommy had been on a scaffold finishing cement on an elevator tower the day he was hurt. He hooked the lanyard to a steel loop that had been driven into the cement. Believing he was secure, he reached as far as he could to his right to smooth the fresh cement, when the hook slipped out of the bolt and he fell. There were no witnesses.
Mason picked up the belt, the metal cold in his hand. He worked the action on the safety hook just as he had in front of the jury, demonstrating how the slightest pressure caused it to slide open and how easy it was for Tommy to fall. He wondered again what he could have done differently to win Tommy's case.
Immediately after the accident, Tommy's employer gave the belt to Warren Philpott, the owner of Philpott Safety Systems, to examine it for defects. Philpott, to no one's surprise, claimed there was nothing wrong with it.
The expert safety engineer Mason hired said there was nothing wrong with the way the belt was made. It worked as it was supposed to. But the expert said the design was defective because it didn't have a lock to prevent the hook from opening and separating from its anchor.