Final Appeal

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Authors: Lisa Scottoline

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Final Appeal
Scottoline, Lisa
HarperCollins (1994)
 
Hard-hitting
and unforgettable, Lisa Scottoline's Edgar Award winning second novel
Final Appeal shines with her characteristic wit and gift for inventive
plot. To Philadelphia lawyer Grace Rossi, who is starting over after a
divorce, a part-time job with a federal appeals court sounds perfect.
But Grace doesn't count on being assigned to an explosive death penalty
appeal. Nor does she expect to have an affair with her boss, Chief Judge
Armen Gregorian. Then the unimaginable happens: an apparent suicide in
strange circumstances leads to Grace becoming involved in a murder
investigation. As events spiral out of control she finds herself
unearthing a six-figure bank account kept by a judge with an alias,
breaking into another judge's chambers, and following a trail of bribery
and corruption that has even the FBI stumped. In no time at all, Grace
under fire takes on a whole new meaning. 
Final Appeal
Scottoline, Lisa
HarperCollins (1994)

Hard-hitting and unforgettable, Lisa Scottoline's Edgar Award winning second novel Final Appeal shines with her characteristic wit and gift for inventive plot. To Philadelphia lawyer Grace Rossi, who is starting over after a divorce, a part-time job with a federal appeals court sounds perfect. But Grace doesn't count on being assigned to an explosive death penalty appeal. Nor does she expect to have an affair with her boss, Chief Judge Armen Gregorian. Then the unimaginable happens: an apparent suicide in strange circumstances leads to Grace becoming involved in a murder investigation. As events spiral out of control she finds herself unearthing a six-figure bank account kept by a judge with an alias, breaking into another judge's chambers, and following a trail of bribery and corruption that has even the FBI stumped. In no time at all, Grace under fire takes on a whole new meaning. 

Lisa Scottoline

Final Appeal

To all my parents, and to Kiki

Contents

1 At times like this I realize I’m too old to…
2 “Are you saying it was Shake and Bake?” I ask,…
3 Empty coffee cups dot the surface of Armen’s conference table…
4 The ringing of a telephone shatters a deep, lovely slumber.
5 I pack Maddie off to school in record time and…
6 Judge Galanter’s breath carries the harsh tang of Binaca. Cigar…
7 His breast pocket bears a plastic plate that says R. ARRINGTON…
8 “Shake and Bake is in jail?” Artie says, shocked.…
9 “She’s too big, Mom,” Maddie says, shuddering in her nightgown.…
10 Executive Parking Lot, says the sign on the steel racks…
11 “Bernice, no!” I shout, but she pays even less attention…
12 Only an hour later I have crossed the threshold into…
13 My head buzzes with liquor from the night before; my…
14 “Who’s there?” I shout, terrified.…
15 Maddie’s gone outside to play, and my mother hands me…
16 “Let’s do it,” Eletha says grimly as we encounter the…
17 I wake up on a green plastic couch in a room I’ve…
18 Bernice rests her chin on the top of the plastic…
19 The phone rings after the police leave. “Grace.” It’s a man’s…
20 Needlepoint is usually surefire therapy. I take refuge in it…
21 I spend a long time at the dining room table, feeling…
22 It’s Sunday, and Bernice, Ricki, and I sit on the…
23 Monday morning I push open the glass door into the…
24 “You had a phone call, Grace,” Eletha calls out from…
25 I slip my master key into the doorknob. It…
26 Galanter’s office gleams in the morning light, all sparkling surfaces…
27 I tell Winn the story while I pop chicken with rosemary…
28 Wednesday is my alleged day off, but I decide to…
29 I sit at my desk with the form letter in…
30 “Hang up, Grace,” Ben says. He closes the door behind…
31 I wake up in silence and semidarkness. There’s a bed…
32 “Will you look at that!” Artie says in amazement at…
33 I sit in the darkened back row of the courtroom,…
34 I turn the Magic Eight Ball over in my hands…
35 We sit uncomfortably in the darkness, on the carpeted steps that…
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Also by Lisa Scottoline
Acclaim and Praise
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher

1

 

A
t times like this I realize I’m too old to be starting over, working with law clerks. I own pantyhose with more mileage than these kids, and better judgment. For example, two of the clerks, Ben Safer and Artie Weiss, are bickering as we speak; never mind that they’re making a scene in an otherwise quiet appellate courtroom, in front of the most expensive members of the Philadelphia bar.

“No arguing in the courtroom,” I tell them, in the same tone I use on my six-year-old. Not that it works with her either.

“He started it, Grace,” Ben says in a firm stage whisper, standing before the bank of leather chairs against the wall. “He told me he’d save me a seat and he didn’t. Now there’s no seats left.”

“Will you move, geek? You’re blocking my sun,” Artie says, not bothering to look up from the sports page. He rarely overexerts himself; he’s sauntered through life to date, relying on his golden-boy good looks, native intelligence, and uncanny jump shot. He throws one strong leg over the other and turns the page, confident he’ll win this argument even if it runs into overtime. Artie, in short, is a winner.

But so is Ben in his own way; he was number two at Chicago Law School, meat grinder of the Midwest. “You told me you’d save me a seat, Weiss,” he says, “so you owe me one. Yours. Get up.”

“Eat me,” Artie says, loud enough to distract the lawyers conferring at the counsel table like a bouquet of bald spots. They’d give him a dirty look if he were anyone else, but because he works for the chief judge they flash capped smiles; you never know which clerk’s got your case on his desk.

“Get up. Now, Weiss.”

“Separate, you two,” I say. “Ben, go sit in the back. Argument’s going to start any minute.”

“Out of the question. I won’t sit in public seating. He said he’d save me a seat, he owes me a seat.”

“It’s not a contract, Ben,” I advise him. For free.

“I understand that. But he should be the one who moves, not me.” He straightens the knot on his tie, already at tourniquet tension; between the squeeze on his neck and the one on his sphincter, the kid’s twisted shut at both ends like a skinny piece of saltwater taffy. “I have a case being argued.”

“So do I, jizzbag,” Artie says, flipping the page.

I like Artie, but the problem with the Artie Weisses of the world is they have no limits. “Artie, did you tell him you’d save him a seat?”

“Why would I do that? Then I’d have to sit next to him.” He gives Ben the finger behind the tent of newspaper.

I draw the line. “Artie, put your finger away.”

“Ooooh, spank me, Grace. Spank me hard. Pull my wittle pants down and throw me over your gorgeous knees.”

“You couldn’t handle it, big guy.”

“Try me.” He leans over with a broad grin.

“I mean it, Artie. You’re on notice.” He doesn’t know I haven’t had sex since my marriage ended three years ago. Nobody’s in the market for a single mother, even a decent-looking one with improved brown hair, authentic blue eyes, and a body that’s staying the course, at least as we speak.

“Come on, sugar,” Artie says, nuzzling my shoulder. “Live the dream.”

“Cut it out.”

“You read the book, now see the movie.”

I turn toward Ben to avoid laughing; it’s not good to laugh when you’re setting limits. “Ben, you know he’s not going to move. The judges will be out any minute. Go find a seat in the back.”

Ben scans the back row where the courthouse groupies sit; it’s a lineup that includes retired men, the truly lunatic, even the homeless. Ben, looking them over, makes no effort to hide his disdain; you’d think he’d been asked to skinny-dip in the Ganges. He turns to me, vaguely desperate. “Let me have your seat, Grace. I’ll take notes for you.”

“No.”

“But my notes are like transcripts. I used to sell them at school.”

“I can take my own notes, thank you.” Ten years as a trial lawyer, I can handle taking notes; taking notes is mostly what I do now as the assistant to the chief judge. I take notes while real lawyers argue, then I go to the library and draft an opinion that real lawyers cite in their next argument. But I’m not complaining. I took this job because it was part-time and I’m not as good a juggler as Joan Lunden, Paula Zahn, and other circus performers.

“How about you, Sarah?” Ben asks the third law clerk, Sarah Whittemore, sitting on my other side. “You don’t have a case this morning. You can sit in the back.”

Fat chance. Sarah smooths a strand of cool blond hair away from her face, revealing a nose so diminutive it’s a wonder she gets any oxygen at all. “Sorry, I need this seat,” she says.

I could have told him that. Sarah wants to represent the downtrodden, not mingle with them.

A paneled door opens near the dais and the court crier, a compact man with a competent air, begins a last-minute check on the microphones at the dais and podium. Ben glances at the back row with dismay. “I can’t sit back there with those people. One of them has a plastic hat on, for God’s sake.”

Artie looks over the top of his paper. “A plastic hat? Where?”

“There.” Ben jerks his thumb toward a bearded man sporting a crinkled cellophane rain bonnet and a black raincoat buttoned to the neck. The man’s collar is flipped up, ready for monsoon season, but it’s not raining in the courtroom today.

“It’s Shake and Bake! He came!” Artie says. His face lights up and he waves at the man with his newspaper. “Go sit with him, Safer, he’s all right.”

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