Authors: Lisa Desrochers
T
HERE’S A COBWEB
in the corner of the window. No spider. Just a cobweb. I tried doing my karate kata to calm myself down, but this room is so small I nearly broke my foot on the cot with my first kick, so for the last three hours I’ve been watching that damn cobweb sway as the air conditioner kicks on and off.
I can’t stop my mind from running over everything that happened in the VIP room last night: the thrill of kissing Blake, the heat of his body against mine, the disorientation when he pulled out his badge. I’ve been over every detail a thousand times, trying to pick out signs I missed that he wasn’t who he said he was. So far I have nothing—no way I could have avoided this. I swear to God, I’m ready to dig out my own eyeball with a spoon just to give my mind something else to obsess over.
I haven’t seen my lawyer since she left me sitting in the interrogation room yesterday morning. Agent Nichols has brought me food and coffee, and taken me to the bathroom when I needed it, and that’s been the extent of my social interaction.
So when she steps through the door with a McDonald’s bag and sets it on my table, I jump off my cot and blurt, “When are you due?” just so she won’t leave right away.
Her hand migrates to her paunch, and her expression turns wary. “A little over three months. September twentieth. Why?”
“Just curious.” Or desperate. “Is it your first?”
She nods.
I reach for the bag and pull out a burger. “You want some of my fries?” I ask, holding the bag out to her.
Her wary expression pulls into a cringe. “I bought some for myself too. I crave french fries all the time,” she says with a swirl of her hand over her belly, “but my husband won’t let me have them. Says they’re bad for the baby. You’re my excuse to get my fix every day.”
I smile, plucking one from the bag and popping it in my mouth. “Glad I could help.”
She closes the door and moves deeper into the room, giving me a chagrined squint. “I know you’d probably like something other than McDonald’s for every meal.”
I shrug. “If I could get a chicken sandwich for dinner instead of a burger, you know, for a little variety . . . and a large order of fries, which I may or may not be able to eat.”
She smiles. “Hey . . . do you play cards?”
“Um . . . not really.”
“If you’re bored, I have a cribbage board.”
I need something to do before I drive myself crazy. “You’ll teach me?”
She nods. “Be right back.”
She’s back a few minutes later with a small plastic board and a deck of cards. We spend the better part of the next hour playing cribbage, but just as I’m figuring it out, my door clicks open and Harrison drags through with a file in his hand. He looks tired. I’m not sorry.
“Come with me, Sam.”
“Why?” I ask, splitting a glance between him and Nichols.
“Your lawyer’s on her way.”
My heart kicks in my chest. I hand Nichols my cards and follow Blake up the hall.
We settle into chairs in the interrogation room, and Harrison tosses his folder onto the table. He tents his fingers over the top of it and just stares at me, his gaze cold as ice. I’m starting to sweat a little, but I won’t break his gaze. I wonder if this is his version of Jenkins’s bad cop thing.
I put up the toughest front I can muster, which I’m sure isn’t all that tough, but I don’t want to give him the satisfaction of knowing he still affects me. I don’t want to show him anything I’m feeling. “You can use your intimidation tactics all you want. I’ve got nothing to tell you.”
He arches an eyebrow at me, and that’s the biggest reaction I’ve gotten out of him since he left me standing in the VIP room. “Am I intimidating you?”
I feel like the mouse as the cat bats it around in the air before snapping its neck. I should have kept my mouth shut, so now I do.
It feels like hours later, though it’s probably only minutes, when the door clicks open and Yvonne sweeps into the room. She swings her briefcase onto the table and lowers herself into the chair next to me. “How are they treating you, Sam? Is there anything you need?”
“Just for you to get me the hell out of here before I chew off my own arms and try to shimmy down the air duct.”
I can’t read her expression, and I wonder if that’s a skill all trial lawyers cultivate.
She looks down her nose at Blake, where he sits across from me. “If you wouldn’t mind?”
He stands and rests a hand on my shoulder on the way to the door. “We’ll be in as soon as you’re ready.”
My hand migrates to the burning path his fingers leave on my shoulder, and I force myself to lower it as he steps out of the room.
Yvonne watches after him as the door closes. “I could be mistaken, but isn’t he the bad guy?”
As I contemplate that, I realize how fluid good and bad are. Though I was only there for two weeks, I really liked working for Ben. He and Nora treated me well, paid me well, and believed in me enough to give me a shot, even when my own parents hadn’t. And now I know why their rules were so important. I never would have thought of them as bad.
And Blake.
It was more than his looks that drew me to him. He was so amazing: passionate and smart and sweet and vulnerable. Yes, if he’d never zeroed in on me, I’d still have my life, but could he really be the “bad guy”?
“I guess.”
Her expression turns skeptical. “So why is he touching you like you’re precious cargo?”
I glance at the door and my hand goes to my shoulder again. “I didn’t know he was.”
She looks at me another long heartbeat before pulling her iPad from her briefcase. “First order of business, your arraignment is tomorrow and I’ve petitioned to have your preliminary hearing immediately following. Once we’re in the courtroom, this will to go pretty fast,” she says, poking at her iPad. “This isn’t a trial. We won’t get a chance to present our case. The judge will read the charges against you and we’ll enter our plea.” She looks over a document on the iPad. “I’m assuming we’re going with not guilty?”
I nod.
“I’ve been looking over what little I have and it seems the entrapment defense is going to be our best shot, so I’ll continue to peruse that. In the meantime, if Special Agent . . .” She glances down at her iPad. “. . . Montgomery does anything inappropriate, I want you to document it. It will only help your defense.”
I nod again.
“Honestly, the fact that this whole case is your arresting agent’s word against yours means they’ll probably get the summary judgment, and we’re not going to be able to mount any defense until the actual trial, but it may force them to show more of their cards than they want.”
My heart sinks as I get what she’s saying. “So, there’s no chance I’ll just be done tomorrow?”
The skin around her eyes creases. “It’s possible, but not probable. They don’t need to prove anything. They only need to show the court that they have enough to
maybe
prove it later.”
I prop my head in my hand and rub the sharp pain in my temple. “Great.”
“But, even if the judge decides to hold you over, we can ask for bail. You have no priors, and you’ve lived here all your life, so flight risk is minimal. I think he’ll set a reasonable bail.”
The image of my mother coming in and posting bail is enough to tighten my stomach into a hard knot. Greg said he was done throwing good money after bad. I’d bet my bail he’d consider this “bad money.” I can’t call them. “What if no one can afford to post my bail?”
“It will be a bail bond, so they’ll only need to come up with a deposit. It’s not the whole amount.”
“But . . . what if no one has any money?”
She tips her head. “You must have a friend or family member who can come up with a few thousand dollars?”
I bite my lips together. “I doubt it.”
She leans on the table, her expression going all sympathetic. “I’ll push for getting you released on your own recognizance.”
“Thanks.”
“So, as far as the agency’s questions. Keep your answers short. Yes or no when possible. Only answer what they ask. Never volunteer any information. But you also want to answer honestly. If there’s something you’re not sure about, or that you think might incriminate you further, consult with me before answering. And if I tell you not to answer something, zip it.”
“Okay,” I say, feeling a little dizzy.
Her hand is warm as she lays it over mine. “It’s going to be okay, Sam.”
I just look at her, because nothing is okay.
“You ready?”
“Yeah.”
She gets up and knocks on the door. It opens a second later, and Cooper comes through with Blake on his heels. They take seats across from Yvonne and me and Cooper slaps his file on the table. He flips a recorder out of his pocket and clicks it on.
“Special Agent Ellis Cooper and Special Agent Blake Montgomery interviewing suspect Samantha Erin West. Lawyer present,” he says, nodding at Yvonne.
She nods back.
“Miss West,” he continues, opening the folder. “During your employment, did you ever see any illegal drugs on the premises of Benny’s Gentlemen’s Club?”
“No.” I start to add that Blake asked me to hook him up, but remember Yvonne telling me to keep it to yes or no.
He flips out the collage of men’s faces that he showed me two days ago. “Do you recognize any of these men?”
“Are you alleging that my client prostituted herself to these men?” Yvonne asks, laying a hand on the collage and pushing it back toward Cooper.
“No,” Cooper says, “but whether any of these men were on the premises is relevant to the case we’re building against Benjamin Arroyo, and if your client is able to help us with that case, we might be able to reduce or drop her charges.”
Her face twists into a scowl. “So you made the arrest to strong-arm information out of my client for your case against this Arroyo character?”
“No,” Cooper says again as Blake’s jaw tenses.
“But he told me right after he arrested me that it wasn’t about me,” I offer, holding Blake’s gaze.
“Really . . . ?” Yvonne drawls, jotting a note on her pad. “I’m sure the judge will be interested to know that.”
Blake presses back in his chair, and his eyes betray nothing as he stares me down.
“Go ahead and answer, if you can,” Yvonne tells me with a nod at the collage.
Cooper pushes the picture at me again. “Which one?”
“I don’t see how it could matter if I saw one of these guys. It’s not like Ben let me sit in on his meetings.”
Cooper’s gaze becomes more pointed. “But the fact he was having a meeting with any of them could be significant.”
I stab a finger at the face of the guy I saw come in the back door of Ben’s office with Nora. “Him. He met with Ben at the club.”
“When?”
I shrug and look up at Blake, whose eyes are trained on me. He’s got one elbow hooked over the back of his chair and an ankle propped on the other knee, like we’re talking about the latest Super Bowl commercials or the weather, instead of my future. I feel an irritated burn start under my skin, like an itch that can’t be scratched. “What night was it that you couldn’t keep your hands off me? A week ago Friday, maybe?”
He holds my gaze without flinching. “The twenty-sixth.”
Cooper jots a note then turns back to me. “What did he say?”
“Blake? Something like, ‘Jesus, Sam. Are you sure I can’t touch you?’ ”
Yvonne barks a laugh, but Blake is still cool as a cucumber.
I picture wrapping my hands around his neck and squeezing. I bet
that
would get a reaction.
Cooper looks like he’s had just about enough of this whole extravaganza. “This guy,” he says, stabbing a finger onto the paper on the table with more vigor than necessary. “Did
he
say anything?”
“No. But Ben didn’t seem all that happy to see him. I thought it was because he was flirting with Nora.”
“This guy was flirting with Arroyo’s wife?” Cooper asks, stabbing the picture again.
I nod. “He was.”
Cooper picks up the collage and pokes at the guy’s face. “Talk to me, Montgomery.” He motions toward the hallway, and Blake follows him out the door.
“This is starting to make sense now,” Yvonne says. “They don’t care about your prostitution charge. It was just their in to your employer’s inner workings.”
“So, how does that help me?”
“First, if they get something they can use on this . . .” She glances down at her pad. “. . . Arroyo person, they’re not going to blink at dropping your charges.”
“So I should help them?”
“Let me work out your deal before you give them more, but my gut is to say yes. If you can help them without incriminating yourself, you should.”
“But I really don’t know anything else. I only worked there for two weeks.”
She cracks the first real smile I’ve seen from her. “That’s almost funny.” But then her expression clears. “They seemed pretty interested in the man you indicated. If there’s anything else you can remember . . .”
“No. He came in and Ben asked me to leave.”
She taps her fingernail on her pad. “I’ll see what I can do with that.”
I
’M DRAGGING A
McDonald’s french fry through a puddle of catsup five hours later when Cooper lets Yvonne into my holding cell. Her expression is a mix of hopeful and grave, and my heart speeds up.
“Is this what they’re feeding you?” she asks, frowning at my McChicken sandwich.
“So far,” I say, setting it aside and standing from my cot.
She indicates with the wave of her hand that I should sit again, so I do. She sits next to me. “There’s been a development.”
My stomach knots, and all of a sudden the greasy fries I ate feel like a really bad idea. “What happened?”
“The man you pointed out? His name is Richard Weber. For the last few months he’s been under investigation by the FBI, and he turned up dead in a Dumpster in the Tenderloin twelve days ago.”
All the blood drains from my head and I feel suddenly dizzy. I rest my elbows on the table and prop my head in my hands, trying to steady it. “Oh, Jesus.”
“You’re sure you saw him in Benjamin Arroyo’s club on Friday the twenty-sixth?”