And then the room went black.
At 7:30 P.M. the telephone in Donald Burdick's co-op rang.
He was in the living room. He heard Vera answer it then mentally followed her footsteps as they completed a circuit that ended in the arched entrance near him. Her calm face appeared.
"Phone, Don," Vera said. "It's the doctor."
The Wall Street Journal crumpled in his hand. He rose and together they walked to the den.
"Yes?" he asked.
"Mr. Burdick?" a woman's matter-of-fact voice asked. "This is Dr. Vivian Sarravich again. From Manhattan General Hospital. I'm calling about Ms. Lockwood."
"Yes?"
"I'm afraid I have bad news, sir Miss Taylor has gone into a coma. Our neurologist's opinion is that she won't be coming out of it in the near future if at all. And if she does she's certain to have permanent brain and neuromuscular damage."
Burdick shook his head to Vera. He held the phone out a ways so that she too could hear. "It's that bad?"
"This is the most severe case of botulism I've ever seen. The infection was much greater than usual. She's had two respiratory failures. We had to put her on a ventilator. And a feeding tube, of course."
"Her family?"
"We've told them. Her parents are on their way here."
"Yes, well, thank you, Doctor. You'll keep me posted?"
"Of course I am sorry. We did everything we could."
"I'm sure you did."
Burdick hung up and said to his wife, "She probably won't make it."
Vera gave a neutral nod and then glanced at the maid who'd silently appeared beside them. "They're here, Mrs. Burdick."
"Show them into the den, 'Nita."
Donald Burdick poured port into Waterford glasses. His hands left fingerprints in a slight coating of dust on the bottle, which, he noticed, had been put up in 1963.
The year that a Democratic President had been killed. The year he made his first million dollars. The year that happened to be a very good one for vintage port.
He carried the glasses to the guests. Bill Stanley, Lamar Fredericks, Woody Crenshaw – all old fogies, his granddaughter might say, if kids still used that word, which of course they didn't – and three other members of the executive committee. Three young partners to whom Burdick was making a point of being kind and deferential.
Three partners who were in absolute terror at the moment – because they had been picked and polished by Wendall Clayton and then leveraged by him onto the executive committee.
The men were in Burdick's study. Outside, wet snow slapped on the leaded glass windows.
"To Hubbard, White & Willis," Burdick said. Glasses were raised but not rung together.
The Reconstruction had began swiftly. Only one of Claytons lackeys had been fired outright – tall, young Randy Simms III, a fair-to-middlin' lawyer but one hell of a scheming nazi sycophant, Vera Burdick had observed. It had been her delightful task to transmit, through her own social network, rumors of various types of illegal scams the young partner was guilty of. By the time she was through he'd been thoroughly blackballed and was a pariah in the world of New York law and Upper East Side society.
As for the other pretty young men and women associates on Clayton's side they weren't asked to leave, the theory being they'd work even harder to rid themselves of the contamination. These secessionists and collaborators were given the shaved-head treatment then kicked onto the summer outing and hiring committees.
These three Nameless were the last order of business in the Purge.
One of them said, "Your wife, Donald, is a charming lady."
Burdick smiled. They had of course met Vera before this evening though she had never served them dinner, never entertained them, never told them stories of her travels and anecdotes about her famous political friends, never, in short, grilled them like an expert interrogator.
He set the assassination-year bottle in the middle of the tea table.
He said, "Bill knows this but for the rest of you, I have some news. I'm meeting tomorrow with John Perelli. We have a problem, of course. Perelli's position is that Wendall's discussions with him suggest an implicit agreement to go forward with the merger – even though the whole firm's never approved it."
One of the Nameless nodded. Impressed that the man returned his gaze, Burdick continued, "His thinking is that we agreed to negotiate in good faith. The firm has now decided that we do not want to go forward simply because we do not want to go forward. That is not good faith. We have an implied contract problem. Look at Texaco and Pennzoil."
Another Nameless. "I know the law, Don." This was a little brash, as the youngster understood immediately, he continued more contritely, "I agree they'd have an argument but I think we hedged well enough so that with Wendall gone the basic deal has changed."
Vera asked bluntly, "Was Clayton's presence a condition precedent to going forward?"
Two of the Nameless blinked, hearing the charming woman nail the legal situation perfectly with one simple question.
"No."
Her husband, smiling, shrugged. "Then, I submit, we still have our problem."
The first Nameless said, "But what would they want as a remedy? Specific performance?"
Burdick decided the man was an idiot and made a mental note to give him only scut work for the rest of his time at Hubbard, White. "Of course not. The courts can't make us merge."
Bill Stanley said, "They want money. And what do we want?" When no one answered he answered himself,
"Silence."
Burdick said, "No more publicity. Under any circumstances. A senior partner kills himself? Bad enough and we're going to lose clients because of that, my friend. Then a suit from Perelli? No, I want to preempt them."
Lamar Fredericks, round, bald and roasted from two weeks of golf on Antigua, said, "Preempt? You mean bribe? Cut the crap and tell us what it's going to cost."
Burdick looked at Stanley, who said to the group, "We'd pay Perelli twenty million. Up to, that is. We'll start lower, of course. Full release and agreement not to say anything to the press. If they do, liquidated damages of a double refund."
Crenshaw snorted. "What does that do to our partnership shares?"
Burdick snapped, "It'll be a cut out of operating profits. Take a calculator and figure it out yourself."
"Will they buy into it?"
Burdick said, "I'll be as persuasive as I can. The reason you're all here is that it would be an expenditure out of the ordinary course. I don't want to present it to the firm. So to authorize it we need a three-quarters vote of the executive committee."
None of them had assumed that this was solely a social dinner, of course, but it was not until this moment that they understood the total implications of the invitation. They were the swing votes and were being tested, Burdick had to know where they stood.
"So," Burdick said cheerfully, "are we all in agreement?"
This was the final exorcism of Wendall Clayton. In these three trim, handsome lawyers resided what was left of his ambitious spirit.
Was his legacy, Burdick wondered, as powerful as the man?
Gazes met. No one swallowed or shuffled. When Burdick called for the vote they each said an enthusiastic "In favor."
Burdick smiled and, when he poured more port, gripped one of them on the shoulder – welcome to the club. He was the foolish partner, the one whose professional life would be a living hell from that day on.
Then Burdick sat down in his glossy leather wingback chair and reflected on how much he despised them for not having the mettle to take Clayton's fallen standard and shove it up his – Burdick's – ass. He then grew somber. "Oh, just so you know. We have another problem, I'm afraid."
"What do you mean?" Stanley's voice was a harsh whine.
"One of the paralegals is in the hospital," Vera Burdick explained. "It's quite serious. I have a feeling she won't survive."