The Brethren (31 page)

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Authors: John Grisham

Tags: #Fiction / Suspense

BOOK: The Brethren
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He couldn’t imagine what they wanted with $5,000.

TWENTY-EIGHT

A
fter three days of stepping over and around Wes and Chap, Trevor needed a break. They wanted breakfast, lunch, and dinner together. They wanted to drive him home and pick him up for work, very early in the morning. They were running what was left of his practice—Chap the paralegal, Wes the office manager, both of them drilling him with endless questions because there was precious little lawyering to be done.

So it was no surprise when they announced they would drive him to Trumble. He didn’t need a driver, he explained. He’d made the trip many times, in his trusty little Beetle, and he’d go it alone. This upset them, and they threatened to call their client for guidance.

“Call the damned client, for all I care,” Trevor yelled at them, and they backed down. “Your client is not running my life.”

But the client was, and they all knew it. Only the money mattered now. Trevor had already performed his Judas act.

He left Neptune Beach in his Beetle, alone, followed by Wes and Chap in their rental car, and behind them was a white van occupied by people Trevor would never see. Nor did he want to see them. Just for the hell of it, he made a sudden turn into a convenience store for a six-pack, and laughed when the rest of the caravan slammed on brakes and barely avoided a wreck. Once out of town, he drove painfully slow, sipping his beer, savoring his privacy, telling himself he could suffer through the next thirty days. He could suffer through anything for a million bucks.

As he neared the village of Trumble, he had the first pangs of guilt. Could he pull this off? He was about to face Spicer, a client who trusted him, a prisoner who needed him, a partner in crime. Could he keep a straight face and act as if things were fine, while every word was being captured by a high-frequency mike in his briefcase? Could he swap letters with Spicer as if nothing had changed, knowing that the mail was being monitored? Plus, he was throwing away his law career, something he’d worked hard to attain and had once been proud of.

He was selling his ethics, his standards, even his morals for money. Was his soul worth a million bucks? Too late now. The money was in the bank. He took a sip of beer and washed away the fading twinges of guilt.

Spicer was a crook, and so were Beech and Yarber, and he, Trevor Carson, was just as culpable. There’s no honor among thieves, he kept repeating silently.

Link got a whiff of the beer wafting off Trevor as they walked down the hall and into the visitors’ area.
At the lawyers’ room Trevor looked inside. He saw Spicer, partially hidden by a newspaper, and was suddenly nervous. What kind of low-life lawyer carries an electronic listening device into a confidential meeting with a client? The guilt hit Trevor like a brick, but there was no turning back.

The mike was almost as big as a golf ball, and had been meticulously installed by Wes in the bottom of Trevor’s beaten-up and scruffy black leather briefcase. It was extremely powerful, and would easily transmit everything to the faceless boys in the white van. Wes and Chap were there too, ready with their earphones, anxious to hear it all.

“Afternoon, Joe Roy,” Trevor said.

“Same to you,” Spicer said.

“Lemme see the briefcase,” Link said. He gave a cursory look, then said, “It looks fine.” Trevor had warned Wes and Chap that Link sometimes took a peek into the briefcase. The mike was covered by a pile of papers.

“Here’s the mail,” Trevor said.

“How many?” Link asked.

“Eight.”

“You got any?” Link asked Spicer.

“No. None today,” Spicer replied.

“I’ll be outside,” Link said.

The door closed; feet shuffled, and suddenly there was silence. A very long silence. Nothing. Not a word between lawyer and client. They waited in the white van for an eternity, until it was obvious something had gone wrong.

As Link stepped from the small room, Trevor quickly and deftly set the briefcase outside the door, on the floor, where it rested benignly during the remainder of the attorney-client conference. Link noticed it, and thought nothing about it.

“What’d you do that for?” Spicer asked.

“It’s empty,” Trevor said, shrugging. “Let the closed-circuit see it. We have nothing to hide.” Trevor had had one final, brief attack of ethics. Maybe he’d bug the next chat with his client, but not this one. He’d simply tell Wes and Chap that the guard took his briefcase, something that happened occasionally.

“Whatever,” Spicer said, riffling through the mail until he came to two envelopes that were slightly thicker. “Is this the money?”

“It is. I had to use some hundreds.”

“Why? I plainly said twenties and fifties.”

“That’s all I could find, okay. I didn’t anticipate needing that much cash.”

Joe Roy studied the addresses on the other letters. Then he asked, rather caustically, “So what happened in Washington?”

“It’s a tough one. One of those rent-a-box outfits in the suburbs, open twenty-four hours, seven days a week, always somebody on duty, lots of traffic. Security is tight. We’ll figure it out.”

“Who are you using?”

“Some outfit in Chevy Chase.”

“Gimme a name.”

“Whatta you mean, gimme a name?”

“Give me the name of the investigator in Chevy Chase.”

Trevor drew a blank; invention failed him. Spicer was on to something, his dark liquid eyes glowing with intensity. “I can’t remember,” Trevor said.

“Where’d you stay?”

“What is this, Joe Roy?”

“Give me the name of your hotel.”

“Why?”

“I have the right to know. I’m the client. I’m paying for your expenses. Where did you stay?”

“Ritz-Carlton.”

“Which one?”

“I don’t know. The Ritz-Carlton.”

“There are two. Which one was it?”

“I don’t know. Not downtown.”

“What flight did you take?”

“Come on, Joe Roy. What is this?”

“What airline?”

“Delta.”

“The flight number?”

“I don’t remember.”

“You got back yesterday. Less than twenty-four hours ago. What was your flight number?”

“I don’t recall.”

“Are you sure you went to Washington?”

“Of course I went,” Trevor said, but his voice broke a little from a lack of sincerity. He had not planned his lies, and they were breaking down as fast as he put them up.

“You don’t know your flight number, which hotel you stayed in, or the name of the investigator you
spent the last two days with. You must think I’m stupid.”

Trevor didn’t answer. He could only think of the mike in the briefcase and how lucky he was to have it outside. Getting flogged like this was something he’d rather Wes and Chap not hear.

“You’ve been drinking, haven’t you?” Spicer asked, on the attack.

“Yes,” Trevor said, a temporary pause in the lying. “I stopped and bought a beer.”

“Or two.”

“Yes, two.”

Spicer leaned on his elbows, his face halfway across the table. “I got some bad news for you, Trevor. You’re fired.”

“What?”

“Terminated. Sacked. Gone for good.”

“You can’t fire me.”

“I just did. Effective immediately. By unanimous vote of the Brethren. We’re notifying the warden so your name will be removed from the list of attorneys. When you leave today, Trevor, don’t come back.”

“Why?”

“Lying, drinking too much, sloppy habits, a general lack of trust on behalf of your clients.”

It sounded true enough, but Trevor nevertheless took it hard. It had never crossed his mind that they’d have the guts to fire him. He clenched his teeth and asked, “What about our little enterprise?”

“It’s a clean break. You keep your money, we’ll keep ours.”

“Who’ll run it on the outside?”

“We’ll worry about that. You can pursue an honest living, if you’re able.”

“What would you know about an honest living?”

“Why don’t you just leave, Trevor? Get up, walk out, it’s been lovely.”

“Sure,” he mumbled, his thoughts a blur but two coming to the forefront. First, Spicer had brought no letters, the first time that had happened in many weeks. Second, the cash. What did they need the five grand for? Probably to bribe their new lawyer. They’d planned their ambush well, which was always an advantage they held because they had so much time on their hands. Three very bright men, with lots of idle time. It wasn’t fair.

Pride made him stand. He extended a hand and said, “Sorry it had to happen.”

Spicer shook it reluctantly. Just get out of here, he wanted to say.

When they made eye contact for the last time, Trevor said, almost in a whisper, “Konyers is the man. Very rich. Very powerful. He knows about you.”

Spicer leapt up like a cat. With their faces just inches apart, he said, also in a whisper, “Is he watching you?”

Trevor nodded and winked. Then he grabbed the door. He picked up his briefcase without a word to Link. What was he supposed to say to the guard? Sorry, old boy, but the thousand bucks a month in cash you were getting under the table just got cut off. Sad about it? Then ask Judge Spicer here why it happened.

But he let it pass. He was reeling and almost dizzy, and the alcohol didn’t help. What would he tell Wes
and Chap? That was the question of the moment. They would hammer him as soon as they could catch him.

He said good-bye to Link, and Vince, Mackey, and Rufus up front, same as always but now for the last time, and walked into the hot sun.

Wes and Chap were parked three cars down. They wanted to talk but played it safe. Trevor ignored them as he tossed his briefcase into the passenger’s seat and got in the Beetle. The caravan followed him away from the prison, and slowly down the highway toward Jacksonville.

Their decision to dispose of Trevor had been reached with a maximum of judicial deliberation. They’d spent hours hiding in their little room, studying the Konyers file until every word of every letter was memorized. They’d walked miles around the track, just the three of them, playing one scenario against another. They ate together, played cards together, all the while whispering new theories of who might be watching their mail.

Trevor was the nearest culprit, and the only one they could control. If their victims got sloppy, they could do nothing about it. But if their lawyer had failed to watch his trail, then he had to be fired. He was not the type to evoke a lot of trust in the first place. How many good, busy lawyers would be willing to risk their careers in a gay extortion scheme?

The only hesitation in ridding themselves of Trevor was the fear of what he might do with their money. They expected him to steal it, frankly, and they
couldn’t stop him. But they were willing to run that risk in return for a bigger score with Mr. Aaron Lake. To get to Lake, they felt they had to eliminate Trevor.

Spicer gave them the details of their meeting, word for word. Trevor’s muted message at the end stunned them. Konyers was watching Trevor. Konyers knew about the Brethren. Did that mean Lake knew about the Brethren? Who was really Konyers now? Why did Trevor whisper this and why did he leave his briefcase outside the door?

With the scrutiny that only a team of bored judges could generate, the questions poured forth. And then the strategies.

Trevor was making coffee in his newly cleaned and shined kitchen when Wes and Chap made their quiet entry and came straight at him.

“What happened?” Wes asked. They were frowning and gave the impression they’d been fretting for some time.

“What do you mean?” Trevor asked, as if things were splendid.

“What happened to the mike?”

“Oh that. The guard took the briefcase and kept it outside.”

They frowned at each other some more. Trevor poured the water into his coffee machine. The fact that it was almost five and he was making coffee was duly noted by the agents.

“Why did he do that?”

“It’s routine. About once a month the guard will keep the briefcase during the visit.”

“Did he search it?”

Trevor busied himself by watching the coffee drip. Absolutely nothing was wrong. “He made his usual quick exam, which I think he does with his eyes closed. He removed the ingoing letters, then took it. The mike was safe.”

“Did he notice the thick envelopes?”

“Of course not. Relax.”

“And the meeting went well?”

“It was routine, except that Spicer had no outgoing mail, which is a bit unusual these days, but it happens. I’ll go back in two days and he’ll have a stack of letters, and the guard will not even touch the briefcase. You’ll get to hear every word. Want some coffee?”

They relaxed in unison. “Thanks, but we’d better go,” Chap said. There were reports to make, questions to answer. They started for the door, but Trevor stopped them.

“Look, fellas,” he said very politely. “I’m perfectly capable of getting dressed by myself, and of having a quick bowl of cereal, alone, the way I’ve done it for many years. And I like to open my office here no earlier than nine. Since it’s my office, we’ll open at nine, and not a minute sooner. You’re welcome to be here at that unholy hour, but not at eight fifty-nine. Stay away from my house, and stay away from this office until nine. Understood?”

“Sure,” one of them said, and they were gone. It didn’t really matter to them. They had bugs crawling all over the office, the house, the car, even the briefcase now. They knew where he bought his toothpaste.

Trevor drank the entire pot of coffee and sobered
up. Then he began his movements, all carefully planned. He’d started preparing the moment he left Trumble. He assumed they were watching, back there with the boys from the white van. They had the gadgets and the toys, the mikes and the bugs, and Wes and Chap certainly knew how to use them. Money was no object. He told himself to believe they knew everything, just let his imagination run wild and assume they heard every word, followed every turn, and knew exactly where he was at all times.

The more paranoid he was, the better his chances of escape.

He drove to a mall sixteen miles away near Orange Park, in the sprawl south of Jacksonville. He roamed and window-shopped and ate pizza in a near-empty food court. It was difficult not to dart behind a rack of clothes in a store and wait for the shadows to walk by. But he resisted. In a Radio Shack, he bought a small cell phone. One month of long distance with a local service came with the package, and Trevor had what he needed.

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