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Authors: Catherine Coulter

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CHAPTER
19

N
OW THIS WAS
a kicker, if, that is, Bobby was telling the truth, Savich thought. “Did you hear anything they were saying to each other?”

Bobby shook his head. “No, but Justice Califano was intense. I remember he pulled some papers out of his jacket pocket, held them rolled up, and gestured with them in front of Justice Wallace's chest, as if he were punctuating each of his words.”

“You heard nothing at all?” Sherlock said.

“I saw Justice Wallace rear back, like it was an attack and he looked surprised and indignant, but there were lots of tourists milling around, a big crowd of them, finishing up a tour in the gift shop to buy souvenirs, and I couldn't see them any longer. I wondered what it was about, but they disagreed sometimes, all of them. I didn't pay that much attention at the time.”

“Okay,” Sherlock said. “Let's get back to Eliza.” From what Sherlock could tell, Eliza was well liked among the law clerks. Bobby Fisher would do well to watch his mouth. She said, “What do you think Eliza thought of Justice Califano?” She
looked directly at Bobby, but the other three clerks knew the question was coming to each of them, and it set them to thinking. Too bad, but who knew what they'd say in response to another's comments?”

Bobby said, “Justice Alto-Thorpe thought Eliza and Justice Califano didn't get along all that well, but you know, I don't believe that. I know she admired the old guy. She tried to protect him and his time from anything she didn't think was important.”

Sonya McGivens agreed. “Eliza practically worshiped him. The thing is, Justice Califano treated her like an equal in a way none of the other Justices do with their law clerks. Justice Wallace sure has never treated me or Tai like that. Justice Wal—” Her voice dropped off. She turned red, seemingly embarrassed, about what she'd almost said.

Dennis Palmer nodded in agreement. “That's true. It isn't at all like Justice Gutierrez treats me.”

“And how does he treat you, Dennis?” Sherlock asked.

“He's always nice to me, don't get me wrong, always listens politely to what I have to say. But I always feel like he's ready to pat me on the back. I rarely feel he really wants to talk to me.”

“So you think Justice Gutierrez treats you that way because you're black?” Sherlock asked.

He smiled at her. “No. I've never thought Justice Gutierrez is prejudiced. He hired me because I was law review, at the top of my class at Maryland, interviewed well, and presented him two topflight recommendations. But I really do think it made him feel warm and fuzzy to hire a black man, because he's a minority himself, although I doubt he's ever thought of himself in that way.”

“All right,” Savich said. “Tell me about Danny O'Malley.
Bobby, when you were in Eliza's office on Friday morning, what was Danny doing?”

“Okay. All right.” Bobby took a deep breath. “Danny was at his desk, working on something, I don't know what. He looked up, saw me, and kind of winced. He did that whenever I came in. He never said anything nasty to me, not like Eliza did, he'd just sort of wince. Maybe he didn't like it that I'd ask Eliza out on dates. Maybe he wanted Eliza too, sort of a dominance thing.”

“No,” Sonya said. “Danny really liked Eliza, he looked up to her. He wasn't interested in her that way. He was going out with Annie Harper, you know, the girl he met over at the Department of the Interior.”

Sherlock asked, “Bobby, did you see Danny go into Justice Califano's office?”

Bobby shook his head.

Tai Curtis said, “I wasn't anywhere close that day. You guys weren't either, were you?”

Dennis and Sonya shook their heads.

Ben said, “Bobby, did you see Danny at any other time on Friday?”

Bobby thought a moment, then nodded. “Yeah, I saw him and Fleurette go out to lunch. They had their heads together, talking real low, about what, I don't know. I didn't see Danny again. What did he have on the murderer, Agent Savich? What could he have possibly known, found out?”

“We don't know yet, but we will soon.”

Callie said to Sonya McGivens, “Could I come with you to the kitchen, Ms. McGivens? I need a glass of water.”

“Sure.” Sonya shrugged, tugged her lacy white top over her
bare stomach, where it hovered for perhaps two seconds before slipping back up, and wandered out of the living room. She'd been here before, Callie thought. Why? Certainly not to hang out alone with Bobby.

“None of us are stupid, Detective—I'm sorry, I don't remember your name?”

“My name's Callie Markham.”

Sonya stopped dead in her tracks, stared up and down at Callie. “I thought you looked familiar. You're Justice Califano's stepdaughter. I was thinking maybe you'd given me a parking ticket or something, but that's not it at all. You've visited your stepfather before in his chambers, haven't you? And you're not a cop, you're a reporter—for
The Washington Post,
right?”

“Yes, I am. But I'm not here to do any story, Ms. McGivens. I'm on leave from the paper. I'm here because I think I can help with this investigation, a sort of an inside eye, someone who knows many of the players. I really want to find out who killed my stepfather. Can you tell me what you nearly said out there about Justice Wallace?”

Sonya rolled her eyes. “Please keep this quiet, Callie. Can I call you Callie?”

“Of course.”

“And call me Sonya. Okay, I'll tell you, not that you'll believe it—Justice Wallace tried to come on to me once, in a subtle sort of way. I must have looked so horrified, he tried to laugh it off as a joke. He looks at me sometimes, I'll see him from the corner of my eye, looking. I have a good figure and I like to show it off, but to have a Supreme Court Justice staring at you, well, it's enough to put you off your feed. But who really knows what old guys are thinking anyway?”

“I don't even know what young guys are thinking most of the time,” Callie said.

“That's easy. It's always sex. That detective you're with, Ben Raven, now you look in those sexy dark eyes of his, and he's transparent as water. He might as well be wearing a neon sign:
Wanna have sex with me, Callie?
He's a hunk. You guys dating, right?”

Ben the hunk wanted to have sex with her? Nah, he barely liked her, although he had been looking at her butt. And he liked her butt, even if it was civilian. She cleared her throat, aware that Sonya was smirking at her. “No, we're not dating. I'm not lying, dammit. Listen, really, we're paired up on only this investigation. Since I'm not a cop, he isn't too pleased about me tagging along.”

“Oh boy, are you ever blind. Polish up your eyesight, Callie. He likes you, I can tell. And you know what? He didn't look below my face once, not once. That's fortitude. Yeah, the man wants you.”

Callie smiled, since this notion clearly astounded Sonya McGivens. “I'm curious, Sonya. You're not going to show off your body when you're out in the real world, are you?”

“Probably not, but it would be a temptation. Some guys on the jury wouldn't hear a single word out of the other lawyer's mouth. They'd be looking at me and agreeing with whatever I said.” She sighed. “But professionalism has its place. I do wish guys and their libidos would remember that. Hey, since you're a reporter, you must have problems with men who think because you've got different equipment you shouldn't be allowed to play in their sandbox.”

Callie grinned. “Tell you what. Let's go for drinks some evening and try to solve that problem. Right now, we've got to
focus on this. Do you know if Justice Wallace may have behaved inappropriately with any other female law clerks?”

“There are only ten of us, but I think I'm the only one he ever tried anything with. I've heard some stories, everyone has, about Court secretaries that go back years. His poor wife. She seems nice, but downtrodden, like she knows too much and has no intention of doing anything about it. It's like her generation is hard-wired to protect their husbands even when they know the men have been unfaithful. Me, I can't stand women who let their husbands walk all over them, but I guess that's the way things were for them.”

“So he never hit on Eliza?”

Sonya laughed, really laughed, and Callie saw her navel ring dance. She gasped out, “Justice Sumner Wallace hit on Eliza Vickers? Oh, that's a hilarious image. Oh no, he knew Eliza would have produced a spit right there, skewered him on it, and barbecued him. She'd have turned him into leather. No, he wasn't suicidal.”

Callie liked Sonya and was tempted to ask if she thought Eliza had slept with her stepfather, but she couldn't get the words out of her mouth. She had a feeling that Sonya would have told her if she'd seen or heard anything.

Callie said, “Sonya, would you really be surprised if it turns out Danny O'Malley tried to blackmail whoever killed my stepfather?”

Sonya got a glass down from the cupboard, turned on the water at the sink, slid her fingers through it to make sure it was cold, and filled the glass, all without saying anything. When she handed the glass to Callie, she said, “Oh yes. You see, Danny always looked
out for
numero uno.
He was a good law clerk, don't get me wrong, he worked hard, and he was smart, but he was after big money, wanted to make gobs of it, and unlike most of us, that's why he came to the Supreme Court. He believed it was his ticket to New York. He wanted to make his mark there, nowhere else, not like Bobby Fisher who obsesses about going to L.A. and defending the stars.”

“Was Danny bright enough to succeed in the big time in New York, do you think?”

“The truth is we all have a ticket to just about anywhere, Callie. I don't know about Danny's future. He was really bright, but sometimes he'd talk and talk, and you'd know he hadn't read enough or thought enough about the topic to even give an opinion. He trusted his ability to bullshit. Maybe that's what he did here, only this time it didn't turn out well for him.”

Sonya slammed her fist down on the counter. “Why the hell would he be so stupid as to get involved with a murderer? Didn't he care about Justice Califano's death? Did he really believe the guy who had the balls to kill a Supreme Court Justice in the Supreme Court library was going to pay him money because of any threat he made?” She shook her head, and paused. “Poor Eliza. She liked to think of Danny as an Irish lad filled with ideals. She was really wrong.”

Callie took a drink of the water, placed the glass back on the kitchen counter. “What do you think about Dennis Palmer?”

“Dennis is okay. I just wish he'd get over this black thing. He likes to think of himself as Justice Gutierrez's token black boy, although he'd never admit it. I think he'd do better with one of the white Justices—conservative, liberal—it wouldn't matter. I swear
none of them would give a damn if you were pink or black or green. Female, now, that's another matter. Isn't it ironic that you have sex discrimination in the Supreme Court?”

“Yes, it is. And Tai?”

“He works hard, puts in his two cents, but keeps his head down. He expends a lot of energy being careful about what he says and how he looks because he's gay, and hasn't advertised it outside our chambers. I have no clue if Justice Wallace has picked up on that.”

“What does Tai think of Eliza Vickers?”

“He admitted to me once, after three beers on a Friday night at George's Pub, that he thought she was too smart for her own good, that it would get her into real trouble some day. She saw things she shouldn't see, he said, and she didn't know enough to look the other way.”

Callie finally decided to ask. “Did he ever say anything about Eliza and my stepfather?”

Sonya looked genuinely surprised. “No, never. As I said, Tai keeps his head down, except around me and Justice Wallace's other law clerks. Then he'll mouth off, particularly if he thinks someone is attacking gays.

“As you can imagine, rumors abound in the Court. We're always in each other's chambers, gossiping, telling each other where our Justices stand on this or that issue and what we're working on.” She paused a moment. “I'm really sorry about Danny. I'll tell you, Callie, if I had him here in the kitchen with me, I'd punch his lights out for being so damned stupid.” She stood there, tears sliding down her cheeks. “Oh, poor Danny. It's scary. This is just too close to home, you know?”

CHAPTER
20

T
HE
K
ETTERING HOME
F
AIRFAX
, V
IRGINIA
S
UNDAY EVENING

B
EN STOPPED OFF
in Georgetown to let Savich get his Porsche, then led the way to the Kettering home in Fairfax. They pulled into the driveway just after seven o'clock that evening.

There weren't any reporters or TV vans hanging around. The media hadn't yet learned where the widow was stashed.

But there were four cars parked along the curb, two Mercedes, a Lexus, and a BMW. Callie said to Ben, “It looks like Mom's friends are here.”

Ben wasn't listening. He was staring at the display of automotive affluence, and grunted. He wasn't a snob, dammit, but couldn't any of them drive a plain old Ford? A truck, something useful, something that didn't smack you in the face with dollar signs and twelve cylinders, something like his? The Crown Vic had plenty of muscle, but that was different.

He realized Callie was staring at him, and grunted again. “I drive a Beemer too,” she said, and gave him a shameless grin. “All right, so it's one of the cheaper models. You're a truck guy, right? Maybe you've got a dog hanging out the window?”

Savich and Sherlock joined them at that moment.

“I know it's late, Callie,” Sherlock said, taking her arm, “but we'd like to see how your mom's holding up, see if she's remembered anything more. We won't keep her long. Looks like she's got lots of company in any case.”

Callie nodded. “All her longtime friends are here. There's a couple of cars I don't recognize.”

The snow was melting, the air was sweet and cold. The forecast predicted a dip below freezing tonight, turning what snow was left into ice. It was perfectly dark, not even a sliver of a moon. Callie felt colder than she should have, probably because she was stressed and tired, her stepfather was dead, and now Danny O'Malley was dead too. There was a monster out there, and she didn't have a clue if they were getting any closer. Savich kept stuff to himself, she'd realized that soon enough. So did Sherlock, for that matter. How odd that a husband-and-wife team worked together for the FBI. They were so in tune with each other. She wondered how long they'd been together. She looked over at Ben and wondered if she could ever be in tune with him like that. That stopped her in her tracks. Good grief, she was letting Sonya's remarks get to her.

She heard Savich laugh at something his wife said. Would they let her review all the interviews that Savich was putting on his laptop? She hoped so. She had a good eye. According to Savich, MAX was going to help highlight inconsistencies, red-flag interviews that were glaringly at odds with others, and do the analysis
much more quickly than a person could. Evidently MAX was even going to suggest specific questions to ask. It sounded amazing, and she wanted to see it work.

She unlocked the front door and led them all in. When she went into the living room, she stopped cold.

In addition to Janette Weaverton, Juliette Trevor, Bitsy St. Pierre, and Anna Clifford, Justice Wallace and his wife were cozied up next to Justice Alto-Thorpe and her husband, both couples sitting on a sofa across from Margaret.

“This is an unexpected find,” Savich whispered, and strode in, drawing all eyes to him immediately. He wondered for a moment how the two Justices had found out where Margaret Califano was squirreled away, then remembered the federal marshals assigned to them. They were probably parked discreetly outside.

Savich walked directly to Margaret Califano and took her hand. He smiled down at her. “I hope you're feeling better, ma'am.”

“Callie called me about poor Danny O'Malley. I didn't know him well. It's unbelievable that he's dead too, just like Stewart. What is happening here, Agent Savich?”

Savich said loud enough for everyone in the big living room to hear, “We don't know for sure, ma'am, but it would seem Danny O'Malley knew something and may have tried to blackmail the killer or the person who hired the killer.”

A loud voice, anger simmering just below the surface said, “Given the general incompetence of the people who are supposed to protect us, I am not at all surprised. It is a disgrace, and I shall see to it that Congress does something about it.”

He'd know that voice anywhere, Savich thought, and the words, and turned to Justice Alto-Thorpe, who was sitting on the edge of the sofa, mouth pinched, a cloud of disapproval hanging
over her head. Her husband was looking off toward the windows, seemingly paying no attention.

Savich said easily, “I'm not surprised at your attitude, ma'am, given that you've already told Agent Sherlock and me your feelings on the subject at length.”

“I shall see to it that new laws are passed. Murder done in the highest Court in the land! It will go down as a disgraceful point in our history.”

“Yes, indeed,” Sherlock said. “As it should.” She proceeded to introduce all of them to the Justices and their spouses. She got the distinct impression that neither Justice was pleased to see them.

Callie moved to sit beside her mother. Bitsy St. Pierre quickly scooted over to give her room.

Savich said to Harry Thorpe, “I had wanted to meet you, sir. I've been told that you own and operate Harry's.”

Harry Thorpe looked up at Savich, his mouth opening to reply when Justice Alto-Thorpe said, “He sells fish. What are you doing here, Agents?”

Savich said, “We wanted to see how Mrs. Califano was doing. I assume that's why you are all here?” His question included Justice Wallace and his wife.

Justice Wallace said quickly, “Yes, of course. Beth and I are friends of the family, have been for many years. Naturally we'd want to see how Margaret is holding up.”

Thankfully, Justice Alto-Thorpe remained silent, but she continued to look at Savich, Sherlock, and Ben as if the murders were all their fault.

Savich said, “I assume your federal marshals brought you here?”

Justice Wallace nodded. “Fine fellows. We feel quite safe with
them around.” Beth Wallace didn't say a word. From her expression it was obvious she didn't want to be here. Sherlock saw her look directly at Margaret, and there was something in those faded eyes of hers, something that bothered Sherlock, something that wasn't quite right. Then it was clear. She knew, Sherlock realized, she knew very well that her husband had wanted to add another notch to his aging belt. Sherlock would wager she also knew that Stewart Califano knew about it as well and had been upset at her husband. But why was she looking at Margaret like that? Margaret wasn't the one in the wrong. Then Beth Wallace looked at her husband, saw that he was staring at Margaret. Sherlock saw her wince, look down at her clasped hands, slumping her shoulders, as if in defeat. She'd said everything she felt and knew without speaking a word. She was dressed in lovely black wool trousers, a pink cashmere sweater, and a matching black wool blazer. She looked good on the outside. But her insides?

Margaret said, “Would you like some coffee? Tea? No, not you, Anna, you've done enough.”

“That would be lovely,” Sherlock said. Janette Weaverton quickly rose. Did the women have a rotation schedule? Sherlock could easily picture Janette in tennis whites, skillfully wielding a racket. Yes, Janette looked like she'd be a winner at tennis. Sherlock smiled. “Why don't I help you fetch the goodies?”

The Kettering kitchen was large, the walls a pale yellow, the appliances sparkling new. A large pine table was set in the center, and Sherlock remembered the meal they'd had here with Miles and Katie and the children before they'd returned to Jessborough, Tennessee.

“This is a lovely home,” Janette Weaverton said, and went
efficiently to the coffeepot. Was she staying here with Margaret? Actually sleeping here? Were the other friends as well?

There was really nothing for Sherlock to do, which didn't surprise her. These women seemed so very organized. She leaned against the counter and said, “Margaret has more color in her cheeks. She's very lucky she has such good friends.”

“She's still pretty bad, just sits there, staring off, and the rest of us sit there with her and worry and try to distract her. But she'll make it. Margaret's very strong.”

“How did the five of you get together, Mrs. Weaverton?”

“Janette, please, Agent Sherlock. Incidentally, that's an interesting name. I bet you get lots of jokes about it since you're an FBI agent.”

“Endless numbers of comments, yes. My father is a federal judge in San Francisco, and he gets the jokes too. But not in his courtroom—oh no. I think the ‘Judge Sherlock' scares some of the defendants to their toes. Please call me Sherlock.”

“Okay, Sherlock. The five of us got together in school. We all went to Bryn Mawr, outside Philadelphia, same place Callie went to school.”

“You've known each other that long?”

“Well, we didn't all meet on the same day. I roomed with Margaret our freshman year, so I guess you'd call us the two originals. Actually, we called ourselves the two Eves. Then we picked up Bitsy in biology the second year, Juliette shared an off-campus suite in the third year, and Anna Clifford, a math whiz, was tutoring one of our boyfriends in our senior year. We came together and stayed together.”

“When did the duo set of Justices drop by? Were they unannounced?”

“They arrived maybe ten minutes before you did. And yes, neither couple called first. We've been talking about the Danny O'Malley murder.”

Janette paused a moment with the silver tray and cups. “I've met Justice Alto-Thorpe twice. I wonder if she's always so disapproving of our federal police force?”

Sherlock smiled. “I imagine she hates law enforcement in general, and this sent her right over the top. I can tell you from firsthand experience she's been that way both times I've been near her.”

“It's a wonder her lips don't disappear completely into her face.”

Sherlock laughed, then sobered immediately. “I'm actually surprised that Justice Sumner Wallace came by, since he wanted to seduce Margaret and she told her husband about it. A lot of anger there. Why would he come?”

Sherlock calmly watched Janette Weaverton drop a coffee cup. Both women watched it hit the tile and shatter. That, Sherlock thought, was some payoff to the outrageous statement she'd just made.

“Oh dear, look what I've done. I'm so clumsy.” Janette Weaverton quickly fetched a broom and dustpan from the walk-in pantry, and started in on the mess.

Sherlock said as she watched her sweep up the broken cup and dump it into the garbage can beneath the sink, “Surely you know what happened, Mrs. Weaverton. Surely you aren't at all surprised by this. Margaret told all of you about Justice Wallace and his unwanted antics.”

Janette Weaverton washed her hands, dried them, and said as she turned back to Sherlock, “Margaret said very little about it to us. When Anna brought it up, Margaret laughed it off. I never got
the impression it disturbed her very much. She thought he was an old fool. He's never hit on me.” Janette began to arrange cups on their saucers on the big silver tray.

“Are there teabags?”

“What? Oh certainly.”

She fetched a tea box, an early American piece divided into ten sections, each with a different tea. Sherlock picked out Earl Grey, Savich's favorite. “My husband rarely drinks coffee.”

“Your husband is a lovely man. He obviously takes very good care of himself. You're a lucky woman.”

Sherlock nodded in agreement. “Yes. We have a little boy, Sean is his name. Do you have children, Mrs. Weaverton?”

Janette shook her head as she poured cream into a small pitcher and set it on the tray. “No, my husband and I decided children weren't for us. Then we divorced.” Ah, Sherlock thought, watching the woman, Janette Weaverton had wanted children, but why then hadn't she remarried?

“I've heard Mrs. Califano's boutiques are quite successful. I plan to buy my husband something for his birthday at the one in Georgetown. That's where we live.”

A smooth eyebrow went up. “Georgetown?”

“My husband's grandmother was Sarah Elliott, the painter. She willed her beautiful home to my husband.”

Janette Weaverton's jaw dropped. “Really? Sarah Elliott was your husband's grandmother?
The
Sarah Elliott? How very incredible that must be.”

Sherlock nodded, watched her put sugar packets and Equal in a small bowl, and set it next to the creamer.

Sherlock asked, “Do you work as well, Mrs. Weaverton?”

“No. I'm fortunate to have been born to very rich parents. I do, however, travel a lot. But things are different now with Stewart dead. Perhaps Margaret will need my help. I don't know yet.”

“Would you want to join her in her business?”

“Unfortunately I have no business experience. And, the sad fact is, I don't think I could sell a shoe addict a pair of Ferragamos.”

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