A Class Action (24 page)

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Authors: Gene Grossman

BOOK: A Class Action
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Indovine calls to let me know that Uniman can’t stall any more. The death benefit on Eaton’s wife must be paid soon, because it if isn’t, the insurance company will be exposing itself to a large bad-faith lawsuit from Eaton. I tell him that we’ll try to wrap it up soon. I don’t even believe it myself as I say the words.

I make the usual round of calls to Victor, Jack B., Vaughn, our photo guy and our sound guy. The audio expert has some news. He’s completed the comparison analysis between the two tapes and he’s prepared to testify that the anonymous tipster is none other than Ralph Eaton. I thank him very much and call Myra with the news. She’s glad to hear that another part of my theory has been confirmed, but correctly states our position as still being the same. Without Rosenbaum, we’ve got nothing… nada, zip, zilch, zero, gournisht. I’m glad to hear that her international thesaurus is still working.

 

Only one more day until Larkin and Eaton are triumphant. I hate to lose, especially to a jerk attorney and a murderer. The only upside will be that once Eaton has the money and leaves the country, he won’t want to continue with his groundless defamation suit against me.

I make the usual calls to everyone concerned and for once I know what it must feel like for a candidate to make a concession speech after seeing that the election didn’t go his way.

The other line rings. This is private line reserved for Suzi’s incoming calls. I see it’s Victor calling for some reason or another, probably to ask the kid for autopsy advice. Why not? She obviously knows everything there is to know in this world.

Mister Berland won’t be hurt too much because he wouldn’t have gotten his wife’s share of the estate anyway – it was earmarked for charities. He’s really not happy that Eaton will get it all, and he’s even more depressed that his new friend and houseguest will be taken back to jail. Berland makes a very nice gesture, but I have to tactfully explain that spiriting Joe Morgan out of the country and to some safe place with no extradition laws is not the right thing to do. I hope he takes my advice.

I’m sitting here in the boat’s dining area drowning in my own self-pity when I hear two sounds of pitter-patter. They’re both on their way to her stateroom, and as she passes by me I hear her mutter something. At first, it doesn’t register, so I call out to her just as she’s about to close her door. “What did you say?”

She answers quickly as she slams her door shut. “I know where Rosenbaum is.”

 

 

 

*****

 

Chapter 17

 

This is the last straw. I can’t take it any more. She can’t possibly know where Rosenbaum is. Who does she think she is, Nero Wolfe? She hasn’t done any investigation. All she’s done is listen to my conversations with everyone else. If there’s anything she knows, I must know it too, but I just don’t know that I know it.

I also know there’s no use trying to get the information out of her unless she’s willing to part with it, so I decide to send her a message. To attract the messenger I shake the box of his dog biscuits. Getting in his way while he’s heading for the box is probably as dangerous as trying to stop a guy like Shaquille O’Neal while he’s running at full speed toward the backboard.

Once the drooling messenger has arrived, I neatly place a biscuit in his mouth and a note in his collar. My message to her contains only four words, which are no doubt the only ones she wants to hear. “What do you want?”

The messenger returns to her domain and if I know this kid at all, she’s got a whole laundry list of demands prepared, on top of which is the law firm’s taking jurisdiction of my reward fees. I knew she would come up with some way to get a piece of me on this one.

My answer comes in the form of another e-mail from her. First, she wants our law firm to share in all the fees and rewards earned for stopping Eaton from collecting on the insurance and the inheritance. Second, she wants to personally arrange to have Rosenbaum in the probate courtroom on judgment day, so that the whole cast of characters is assembled. As much as I don’t care for the first two demands, her next ones are even tougher. She wants to be the one who fingers Rosenbaum, because she claims to be the only person involved in this case who knows what he actually looks like now.

The last demand is the real deal-buster. She wants to bring the dog to court with her.

I don’t have a very good track record when it comes to dealing with this kid, so figuring that anyone else in the world would have a better chance with her, I fax the demand letter to Myra, with only one added comment. “This message was mistakenly sent to my inbox. Obviously it’s meant for you.”

I can’t ignore the coincidence. Victor called her on the private line just before she made that remark to me and sent the demand letter.

I call Victor. He hasn’t the slightest idea of what I could possibly be talking about. I knew it. She bought him off. Now she’s in complete control.

Myra calls me. It took a few minutes longer than I expected. I answer with a complete absence of small talk


Yeah I know, she’s out of her mind. Are you going to take care of this, or not? I don’t care one way or the other. I’ve put a lot of energy into this case, and I think that since you’re the District Attorney, the top law officer in this county, it’s your job to interrogate her. Personally, I suggest a thumbscrew, but if your department is out of them, maybe a stretching rack would do the trick.”


Calm down, Peter. She’s obviously cracked the case and wants to help us, but we have to help her too.”


Help her? Help her? She’s holding us all captive unless she gets a ransom payment, and it’s coming out of my pocket! And we both know there’s no way we can allow her to bring that small horse into court with her, and that’s to say nothing of the possible danger of the situation. If she’s right, there’s going to be a killer in that courtroom. No way. I won’t allow it.”


Okay Peter, just chill. If you really know her as well as you think you do, then you’ll have to agree that there’s no way she’ll lose a share of the bonus fees by letting that money go to Eaton, and she’s working you like a slot machine. Can’t you see that?”


Sure I see that. So what makes this day different from other days of the year? She’s always playing me like a jukebox, but this time she’s got something that we all need very badly. Hell, the People of the State of California need her information. There’s a murderer on the loose out there and this may be our only chance to get him. Myra, you’ve got to talk some sense into her.”


Okay, Peter, I’ll give it a shot, but I can’t make any promises. You know she’s got a mind of her own.”

Yeah, I know she’s got a mind of her own. The thing that really gets to me is that it’s so much better than mine. She can’t possibly know any more about this case than I do, so how can she figure it out when I can’t? Myra’s no dummy either, and the kid’s beat her to the solution too. Maybe my fate is to just follow her around and chronicle her cases, like Doctor John Watson did for Sherlock Holmes. Please, just shoot me now.

 

The day has arrived. I’m on my way to the probate court. I’ve had no luck with the kid and neither has Myra. I can’t believe I’m going down in flames like this today. I’ve let everyone down, from Indovine and Uniman, to Joe Morgan and Mister Berland. Everyone looked to me for a miracle. I was supposed to pull a rabbit out of my hat. Even Myra was hoping I could pull it off and give her a really good convictable person. It’s all going down the tubes. In another hour or so, Larkin will be sneering at me, Mister Berland will be poorer, Joe Morgan will be back in jail, and Eaton will be a multi-millionaire.

Losing the bonus fees and getting embarrassed isn’t the worse though, it’ll be seeing Joe Morgan, an innocent guy, get thrown back into County Jail and forced to stand trial for two murders that I know he didn’t commit.

 

For some strange reason Suzi refuses to ride to court with me. She says she has something else planned. I’m afraid to ask what it is, so I leave the boat and meet Jack at the Hummer for our drive downtown.

 

Entering the courtroom, I see that it’s packed. There’s a full house, including attorney Socrates Gutsue, Charles Indovine, Mister Uniman, Mister Berland, Victor, Stuart, Vinnie and Olive, Myra, some reporters, and about six uniforms. Something’s going on here and I wish I knew what it is. I’ll bet the kid invited everyone so she can have a big audience for whatever bone-headed stunt she intends to pull off.

I keep looking around the courtroom, but don’t see any faces I haven’t seen before. If the kid’s running this show properly, then Rosenbaum should be here too.

The courtroom doors swing open and everyone inside watches as Eaton and Larkin strut in. Their coming in reminds me of how I once watched Hulk Hogan and the Rock make grand entrances to those ridiculous wrestling matches drawing millions on pay-per-view. It’s all showbiz, and now Eaton’s part of it. He and Larkin take their sweet time getting to the counsel table. They turn around and smirk at the crowd, letting everyone know that they’ve won and the rest of us are all losers.

Unlike the Federal Courtrooms, State Court time runs on the judge’s watch. When he feels like coming out, the court session begins. If he doesn’t come out, it’s just a room full of nervous people sitting and looking at each other.

The courtroom doors open again and this time it’s Special Agent Snell and his flunkies coming in. I can’t figure out why he’s here, but what the hell, everyone else is, so why shouldn’t the FBI come and watch me being made a fool of?

It’s an afternoon session, and the clock on the wall shows just another minute or two before court is normally scheduled to begin. The court clerk makes an announcement that the judge will be a little late, so we should all just stick around until he arrives.

This isn’t the normal course of events. As clever as the kid is, I can’t possibly believe that her powers are so far-reaching as to make a judge come to court late.

What seems like an hour passes by, but the clock on the wall says it was only two minutes. The double courtroom doors open again and I sit in complete disbelief at what I see starting to come in. It’s the kid, and she’s wearing a pair of dark sunglasses, walking very slowly into the room and is accompanied by the Saint Bernard, who’s wearing one of those harnesses that seeing-eye dogs wear. This can’t be happening. She’s actually trying to pass herself off as a blind person with a Saint Bernard seeing-eye dog.

I lean forward on the counsel table and want to hide my head in my hands until this whole thing is over. I’d much rather prefer finding a loose piece of carpet to crawl under, but hiding my head in my hands will just have to do for now. But, like a car wreck on the freeway or a car chase on the local news, I’m drawn to what’s happening and can’t turn away.

I look over towards Eaton. He obviously recognizes her as the little kid that was in the back seat of the Hummer that day we spoke. He must remember having made some incriminating remarks while in the car with us, and for an instant I think I see some apprehension on his face. Both he and Larkin realize that what’s happening right now in this courtroom has probably never happened before and will never happen again, and nothing good will come of it.

As the kid and dog approach the partition separating participants from spectators, a bailiff opens the swinging gate and the two of them start through. At the same time, out of the corner of my eye, I see Myra, Snell, and all the uniformed officers getting up and starting to follow the kid.

I’m not going to bail her out of this one. She’s finally lost it. After they arrest her for this crazy stunt, it’ll take an enormous donation to get her into any decent college or law school, and I’m not going to come up with one cent in contribution. She’s going to get busted and I don’t care. She’s bringing it all upon herself, so I’m just going to sit back and watch. Actually, it’s kind of nice seeing her make a fool out of herself. I’ve been doing it for years, so it’s about time she learned what it’s like to fall completely flat on your face in a court of law, with everyone you know watching. It’ll be a learning experience for her.

The show’s not over yet. Once through the rail, she and the dog slowly approach the other counsel table, and then it happens. The kid reaches down to the dog’s collar and removes a blue-backed piece of paper. She holds it up in the air and looks like she’s preparing to make an announcement of some sort. There’s a hush in the courtroom. By now, some reporters have come through the back doors, and cameras are at the ready.

This isn’t possible. There are no cameras allowed in here. The kid nods towards the cameras and their battery powered lights come on, bathing her in the spotlight. She waves the blue-backed document in the air, looks directly at Eaton and says, “Alan Rosenbaum, I have in my hand a copy of the Grand Jury Indictment, calling for your arrest on the charges of the pre-meditated murder of Nancy Eaton, Estelle Berland, and Marvin Kupchic. In addition, you will be charged with federal crimes involving explosives.

Larkin is sitting there in a state of shock. Eaton looks around like he wants to make a break for it. The kid shouts out “book ‘em boys.” At this point, Eaton jumps back away from her and towards the private exit that the judge uses, but it’s no use. The court’s bailiff is there to block him and the six uniforms grab him. They struggle him to the ground, and once he’s cuffed they drag him away.

I’m standing up at this point, and as she and the dog slowly walk past me towards the cameras, I can see down behind her dark glasses that she’s winking at me. Myra, who is now standing next to me, tells me to close my mouth because it’s hanging open a little too far.

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