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“Why is he doing this?” Sally asked. “They’ll try to get the death penalty. Why come back?”

“I don’t know. Amanda is with him now. She’ll find out, but she may not be able to tell you.”

Sally clenched her fists. She was looking someplace that Frank could not see. After a few moments she took a deep breath and Frank saw the steely reserve she’d displayed during her trial push aside the other emotions.

“You’ll get through this,” Frank assured her. “So will Kevin.”

“Yes, we will,” Sally answered firmly. “So, Frank, did you come out just to warn me?”

Frank took the waiver out of his jacket pocket. “Amanda is cautious and she likes to do everything correctly. Since I represented you and she’s my law partner, she asked me to approach you about waiving any conflicts of interest so she can represent Charlie.”

“Would there be any danger to Kevin or me if I sign?”

“I don’t think so. The attorney-client privilege would still be in effect and you always maintained your innocence. I can’t think of anything you confided to me that was incriminating. But you can consult an attorney if you’re worried.”

“What will happen if I don’t sign?”

“Amanda might have to get off the case, but that wouldn’t end it. Marsh would just hire a different lawyer.”

“Give me a pen,” Sally said.

“Thank you. This case means a lot to Amanda.”

Sally smiled. “Does she want to prove she’s as good as her old man?”

Frank smiled back. “I’m sure that has something to do with it.”

“She has a long way to go if that’s her goal.”

“Not as far as you might think. She’s one hell of a lawyer.”

Sally’s smile faded. She studied the man across the table. “How are you doing, Frank?”

He shrugged. “The practice is going strong.”

“That’s not what I meant.”

“There hasn’t been anyone significant in my life since you left, if that’s what you’re getting at.”

“You know it hurt me to go, but I had to put Kevin first. He would have been a constant focus of the tabloids, and there was Senior. He even dogged me in Italy. If I didn’t have the money for the best lawyers it would have been worse than it was.”

“You don’t owe me an explanation.”

“I wanted you to know.”

“Thank you. I understand you found someone.”

Sally nodded. “Liam. He’s away teaching a summer course at Berkeley.”

“How long have you been together?”

“Five years now. Kevin adores him.”

Frank forced a smile. “I’m happy for you.”

“It might have been different under different circumstances.”

“You and I are old news, Sally.”

Sally picked up the pen Frank had placed on the table and signed the waiver.

Frank nodded toward the pool. “How much does Kevin know about what happened to his father?”

“He knows Arnie was a congressman and that he was murdered. He knows I was tried but the charges were dismissed.” She paused. “We rarely talk about the case. I guess we’ll have to now. He’ll read about it in the newspaper, and someone at school will bring it up.”

“Is he as tough as his old lady?”

“I think so. I hope so, because this won’t be easy.”

“What about Charlie Marsh? Do you know anything that can help Amanda?”

“Honestly, I don’t. I was focused on Arnie during the fight. I have no idea who shot him.”

“If Amanda wants to talk to you, will you see her?”

“Of course.”

Frank put the waiver in his attaché and stood up. “It’s been good seeing you again, Sally.”

“Can’t you stay? Gina can make us lunch.”

“I wish I could but I have an appointment in town. A client.”

Sally studied him, trying to divine if he was telling the truth. Frank showed her the face juries saw, which exhibited no emotion even when events in the courtroom took sudden or terrible turns. She stood and offered him her hand. It was warm and he let the touch linger for a moment more than was necessary for a farewell.

“I’m glad I got a chance to see Kevin,” Frank said.

“I’m glad I got to see you again.”

Sally walked Frank to his car and waved as he drove off. When he was out of sight, Frank let out the breath he’d been suppressing along with his emotions. He’d lied to Sally. There was no client waiting for him. Being with her had been hard, and he’d had no desire to prolong the pain.

CHAPTER 28

On Tuesday afternoon, shortly after a brief phone conference with Amanda, Kate Ross called to set up an interview with Tony Rose, never expecting the president of Mercury Enterprises to grant it. Rose was the head of an international business empire and she was an investigator for a small local law firm. When Kate drove into the visitors’ parking lot on the Mercury campus, she was still trying to figure out why Rose’s assistant had phoned back fifteen minutes after her call to tell her that Mr. Rose would see her in an hour. The only answer she could come up with was that the names Sally Pope and Charlie Marsh were the equivalent of “Open Sesame” where Rose was concerned.

The Mercury Enterprises campus was a sprawling, ecologically friendly collection of glass-and-steel buildings interspersed with tennis courts, soccer fields, outdoor and indoor basketball courts, and a track-and-field complex. Kate saw an indoor, Olympic-size swimming pool through the glass walls of a pyramid-shaped structure she passed on the way to the administration building. Nationally known track-and-field athletes participated in Mercury’s famous training program, and the campus was home to basketball camps for budding NBA stars. It didn’t take Kate long to conclude that the onetime gigolo and tennis bum had done all right for himself.

The reception area of the administration building with its wide-open spaces, glass walls, and three-story atrium had the feel of a botanical garden. Kate gave her name to the guard at the reception desk. He made a brief phone call before giving her a clip-on visitor’s pass and telling her to have a seat. As she thumbed through a copy of Sports Illustrated, intense men and women sped by her, obviously on missions of great importance. Everyone, regardless of age, looked terribly fit. Kate made a vow to get back into her workout routine as soon as she returned from the interview. Her interlude of self-castigation was interrupted by the appearance of a stunning brunette in an expensive, tailored business suit, who escorted her to an elevator separate from the main bank.

The car whisked them to the executive offices, where the doors opened on a waiting area decorated with cases displaying medals and trophies won by Mercury-sponsored athletes. The walls were covered with blowups of Mercury advertisements and photographs of athletes in action. Kate recognized most of the featured stars. The brunette ushered Kate past the displays to Tony Rose’s inner sanctum.

The office décor was an extension of the waiting room. Trophy cases lined two walls, and photographs of sports figures hung above them. The rest of the walls were glass and gave its occupant a spectacular view of the Columbia River. Tony Rose got up and walked around the side of a large modern desk made of glass and wrought iron. If he’d aged since the Pope trial, Kate couldn’t tell.

“Thank you for seeing me on such short notice,” Kate said as they shook hands.

“When my assistant said you worked for Frank Jaffe’s law firm and wanted to see me about Sally Pope and Charlie Marsh, I had to find out what was going on.”

Rose motioned Kate into a chair and perched on the edge of the desk, gaining the high ground. He flashed a disarming, boyish smile and Kate saw why the ladies at the Westmont might have found him irresistible.

“So, Ms. Ross, what is going on?”

“Charlie Marsh is returning to Oregon to face the charges against him.”