"You should be begging for Oren's help, not harassing him." Ad Winston continued to smile at the CBI agent as he spoke an aside to his client. "That startled look in her eyes? Obviously, the lady never bothered to check out your military record, nothing past your serial number and rank. To quote your father-a very sloppy job."
Sally Polk leaned toward the lawyer. "Well now, Ad, I have to admit that's an eye-opener. You see, I was gonna let your client off easy-no charge of obstructing an investigation. But with a record like that one… I think he should've known better."
"She's bluffing, Oren. That's Sally's trademark. We met in Sacramento when a major case of hers fell apart in court-a case of hot air."
"The way I remember it, you suborned one of my witnesses."
Addison rested an avuncular hand on Oren's shoulder. "They always send the screwup agents to the hinterlands. But she's the first one ever to be condemned to the Highway Patrol."
"Oh, this is just a temporary assignment, Addison. I won't be here long-just long enough to gut your client. Have another brownie, Oren."
18
Hannah! Stop that! I can't hear!"
The housekeeper switched off the vacuum cleaner.
After a brief telephone conversation, the judge hung up on his caller. "That was the sheriff. He says Oren's on TV." Not a believer in remote-control contraptions, Henry Hobbs leaned down to turn on the television set. "Oh, my God." He stared at the glowing screen and a scene of reporters mobbing a parking lot. His son stood at the center of this frenzy, and the backdrop was a brick building, headquarters for the Highway Patrol in Saulburg. The shouts of the mob were unintelligible. Addison Winston climbed up on the hood of a trooper's cruiser, and, with a bit of coaxing, Oren joined him there.
"This is Ad's idea of handling things quietly?" The judge raked one clawed hand over his bald scalp. "It's a circus."
More than that-this was Hannah's old premonition come true. She had always pictured the judge's son taking center stage, surrounded by people and bright lights, a screaming public. "The camera loves him."
The cameras could not get enough of Oren Hobbs. When the afternoon sky grew dark with overcast, lights on poles bore down on him, and strobe lights popped in smaller cameras as photographers edged closer.
"Oren and his damned cowboy boots," said the judge. "He's going to dent the hood of that car."
On screen, Addison Winston stepped in front of his photogenic client, though not to shield him. The grinning lawyer had the look of an elegant sideshow barker with tickets to sell. "Sorry you were called out on a false alarm. I'm afraid Sally Polk has a rich fantasy life."
Hannah turned to the judge and reached out to nudge his arm. "You see? It wasn't Ad's fault. That Polk woman must've called the reporters."
"It was Addison," said the judge. "He's addicted to this kind of attention."
The picture had changed to a close-up of the building in the background, where Sally Polk stood in the open doorway, clearly unhappy with this event. And then the camera turned back to Oren, the one it loved best.
"Did you see that?" Hannah edged her chair closer to the screen. "That was Evelyn Straub standing not two feet away from that door."
"Oh, fine." Henry Hobbs covered his eyes with one hand. "Let's just drag out all the sordid details."
"There she is again." Hannah pulled down the judge's hand. "Look. You see that bright pink thing in her hand? That's the color of Evelyn's checkbook. I bet she planned to bail Oren out of jail."
As if in response to this, Ad Winston's voice boomed from the television set, "Bail? No, there was never an issue of bail. My client came in as a courtesy."
A reporter shouted, "Your guy was wearing handcuffs!"
Addison raised both hands in a crucifixion pose. "Another screwup. It seems there was a breakdown in communications between Sally Polk and the storm troopers."
Well, that's not right," said the judge, indignant. "And it wasn't necessary. That man has no respect for law enforcement."
As I recall," said Hannah, "you told Addison to grind up Sally Polk for dog meat."
Still following those instructions, the lawyer yelled, "It gets better! Judge Montrose-the man who signed the warrant-he was under the impression that there was probable cause. There wasn't. Let me tell you, that's one pissed-off judge."
"Now that last part's true enough." Henry Hobbs nodded at the screen. "Judge Montrose and I had a little talk. Good man. Seems Miss Polk likes to stretch the truth a bit. But so does Addison. He's talking about the search warrant. There never was a warrant for Oren's arrest. He must've been brought in for questioning. That means there's no evidence against him."
"But you always knew that."
"That I did."
They turned back to the television set as a reporter asked, "Oren? Will you be offering any assistance on this case?"
"Absolutely," said Ad Winston, answering for his client before Oren had a chance to open his mouth and say something true. "He's a decorated CID agent. That's the Army's Criminal Investigations Division. He has quite a track record for solving homicides. Incidentally, my client was the one who found the first evidence of his brother's murder. So you might say he's been on the case for a while now."
Oren seemed about to disagree with this, and the lawyer pushed him, forcing him to jump off the hood of the car before he could fall. Ad Winston also jumped to the ground and propelled his client through the crowd to a waiting limousine. The reporters regrouped and followed them across the parking lot. All that was missing was the music of a marching band.
In the distance, Evelyn Straub could be seen standing alone as the parade passed her by To the camera's undiscerning eye, she was a stout, drab figure who blended into the background and faded away.
Oren rode in the backseat of the stretch limousine hired for this special occasion of a carnival press conference. It was equipped with a stereo, television, a coffeemaker and a full bar. All that seemed to be missing was a hot tub. He turned to his lawyer. "Did my father really hire you?"
"Who else? You thought Isabelle might've asked me to defend you?" Ad Winston depressed a button on the console to raise a glass privacy barrier behind the chauffeur's seat. "And now, may I ask, what goes on between you and my daughter?"
"Sir, I've never even spoken to her."
"And yet, reliable witnesses tell me she recently decked you, flattened you out on a town sidewalk. That could pass for rough sex in the third world."
"I tripped."
"Of course you did."
"I'll pay for this myself," said Oren. "What do I owe you?"
"Not one dime. I never earned out the retainer your father paid me twenty years ago. And I won't make much of a dent in what's left. It looks like you're going to walk away from a double homicide."
"You think I murdered my brother and that woman?"
The attorney stared at him with keen interest. "The other set of bones belonged to a woman? Interesting. Don't ever tell me how you knew that. It'll make my job easier if I have to put you on the witness stand." He lifted his briefcase from the floor and settled it on his lap. "But I'm not anticipating a trial. Sally Polk's about to get a direct order to stay out of the sheriff's way. And Cable Babitt doesn't have the talent to catch a shoplifter."
"When Josh disappeared, was it your idea not to bring in the feds and the CBI? Or was that the judge's call?"