Wild Justice (24 page)

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Authors: Kelley Armstrong

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BOOK: Wild Justice
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* * *
I e-mailed the photo to Neil and called to explain.
“He
was
part of the defense team,” Neil said. “I remember seeing him at their table. Can’t recall his name, though. Him and the girl were interns, if I remember right. They took notes and fetched for the big guys.”
“And they
were
big guys,” I said. “Ellis, Silva, and Webb? Shit.”
“You didn’t know they represented Aldrich? Strike one against us.”
“How did Aldrich get them?”
“Pro bono. Someone apparently convinced them it would be good for PR. Hapless kid railroaded by small-town cops. Big-city firm swoops in to the rescue. It happens. Just our piss-poor luck that it happened here.”
“Do you remember anything about the young defense lawyer?”
“Mmm, no. I remember the woman. You didn’t see a lot of them in those days. She seemed to be there to handle the parts about Amy. The character attacks. They must have figured they’d seem less hostile and more believable coming from an attractive young woman, rather than a middle-aged lawyer. They also had her dealing with Aldrich.”
“Oh?”
“Yeah. Obvious ploy. Get the cute girl to handle the accused, the message being that if she wasn’t afraid of him, clearly he wasn’t a murdering rapist. The problem was that Aldrich didn’t respond. He was polite, but there wasn’t any flirtation. He just didn’t reciprocate.”
“She needed to be about ten years younger for that to work.”
Neil gave an awkward laugh. “Yeah, I guess so.”
“So when the intern girl didn’t work out, did they try the guy? See if Aldrich got along better with him?”
“Nah. It wouldn’t have had any impact, and there wasn’t friction with the girl, so they left her as his handler. The guy was pretty much a nonentity, from what I remember. But let me make a few calls. Someone’s sure to remember him.”
* * *
The next morning we went for an early jog. Kind of. It was a process of negotiation. I agreed I’d sleep until seven. Jack agreed he’d get up at seven. Then he drove me to the country, let me off, parked down the road, and leaned against the car, waiting until I caught up, before repeating the process.
I was on my last stretch when my cell phone rang. It was Neil.
“I didn’t wake you, did I?” he asked when I answered.
“Nope, just out for a run.”
A short laugh. “I told myself you wouldn’t do that on vacation, but I should have known better. I’ve got a name on your mystery lawyer. A very interesting name.”
Jack was heading toward me at a brisk walk.
“Sebastian Koss,” Neil said.
I stopped walking. “
The
Sebastian Koss?”
“The only one I’m aware of. I’m going to guess you know who he is?”
Oh, yes, I knew who he was.
* * *
Back at the hotel, I called Emma for a lodge check before doing some research on Koss.
“The guy is Sebastian Koss,” I said to Jack once I had what I needed. “A big name in Toronto legal circles. He was a Crown attorney.”
“Crown . . . That’s prosecution, right?” Jack said.
I nodded. “Americans call them district or state attorneys. I had never even heard that Koss had once been a defense lawyer. Neil hadn’t, either, and had no idea Koss worked on the Aldrich case. For a guy who went on to make such a reputation for himself, he got off to a poor start—he was completely forgettable on that case.”
“So he’s got a rep. Tough on crime?”
“Yes, but here’s where it gets interesting. Koss’s ‘thing’ is victim advocacy, particularly in cases involving women and sexual abuse.”
“Huh.”
“Huh indeed. If you were a defense lawyer with a client accused of rape, you’d do everything in your power to keep it away from Sebastian Koss.”
“You admire him.”
“I do. Victims’ rights. Women’s rights. Hard-line justice. Everything I believe in, he did. With a vengeance.”
“Sounds like a good guy.” He paused. “As long as he stays in Canada. Away from me.”
“No shit, huh?” I gave a short laugh. “Actually, though, he hasn’t lived in Canada in years. He quit law almost a decade ago and went into full-scale advocacy. Consultant. Lecturer. He started in Ontario, but he’s been in Chicago for the last five. That’s part of the reason I didn’t recognize him at Aldrich’s. I’m sure I’ve seen photos, but it would have been a long time ago. Plus he wasn’t exactly dressed like a successful lawyer.”
“Never had any contact with him? As a cop?”
“I didn’t as a cop, but I did have contact of a sort, after the Wayne Franco shooting. He’d quit law by then, but he sent me a letter, extending his support and offering to help me find an attorney. I called him. We talked for a bit. I wasn’t pursuing any legal avenues, but I appreciated the offer. I remember being surprised he contacted me. I guess now I know why.”
“Remembered you. Amy, at least. Knew who you were.”
“He didn’t mention that, but from what I just saw online, that’s not surprising. I found an interview where he talked about making the switch from defense to prosecution. He did it very early in his career, apparently after a case that really bothered him and made him decide he’d prefer the other side of the courtroom.”
“Aldrich’s case.”
I nodded. “The timing is right. He saw Aldrich get off, and he didn’t like it. He switched sides. Years later, he contacts me to offer his help because he remembers that, maybe feels guilty for being part of the defense team.”
“So now he’s with Contrapasso.”
I looked over as I reached for my coffee.
Jack continued, “Law-and-order guy. Big on justice. Victims’ advocate. Former lawyer. Played both sides. Canadian connections. Now consulting. Useful stuff.”
“You mean he’s someone the Contrapasso Fellowship would find uniquely beneficial to their organization. Which may explain his move to the States. So then . . .” I paused and considered. “Maybe Koss brought Aldrich to them. Aldrich was living under an assumed name, so Koss couldn’t just call him up. He probably had to arrange to bump into him, recognize him, and then convince him he’s not a threat. He says he’s on Aldrich’s side. Doesn’t blame him for needing to change his name, given the notoriety.”
“Possible. Somehow he made contact with Aldrich. We know that. Aldrich thinks he spots you? Calls Koss for advice.”
“Thus providing Koss with exactly the opportunity he’s been waiting for. The chance to end Drew Aldrich’s life. In the meantime, though, he has to tell the Contrapasso Fellowship, including the fact that Aldrich may have spotted me. Someone at Contrapasso decides I need to go. The question is whether Koss knew. I’d like to think he didn’t but . . . Roland said whoever took out that hit had an accent like mine, only less noticeable. That fits a guy who lived in the same region and moved to the States five years ago. Sending the package from Philly doesn’t fit, if he’s in Chicago, but that’s a tenuous bit of proof to hold out on.”
“Needs investigating.” Jack checked his watch. “Quinn’s meeting is this morning. Wait for his call. See what he can add. Then we go check out Koss.”
* * *
When Quinn called, he was hyper-chatty, excited, and flying high. The meeting had been everything he’d hoped for, and I was happy for him.
Did I miss him a little when I heard him that way? I won’t deny it. But there was no niggling voice that said I’d made a mistake. I was just happy he was happy, and glad we were able to carry on a normal conversation again. Right now, he was working on gaining their trust. With the information we had on Koss, he could nudge things in that direction. He’d say he did a lot of business in Chicago, and he’d express a particular interest in sexual abuse cases. He’d also ask about recent work they’d done, barring any details, of course, but he’d like to get an idea of the type of cases they handled. Take that and add his professed interests, and he might get us enough to confirm Koss’s membership and the Aldrich hit.
It was going to take a while to pan out and longer still to determine who’d put the hit on me . . . and whether the threat had ended. That’s why, when Quinn called, Jack and I were already in the car, heading for Chicago to see Sebastian Koss.
CHAPTER 33
Jack hated my plan. I knew this, not because he said, “I hate your plan,” but because after I told him what I intended, we spent the next half hour driving in silence. That wasn’t unusual. It was the quality of the silence that told me he was pissed.
“I don’t like it,” he said finally.
“I know.”
His mouth tightened as his gaze stayed on the highway. “So that doesn’t matter? You’re doing it anyway?”
“Did I say that?”
“I fucked up with Aldrich,” he said.
When I said nothing, his gaze swung my way. “You hear me?”
“It would be kind of hard not to. We’re in the same car.”
Another tightening of his lips. “But you’re not arguing. Why? Because it doesn’t fucking matter. Whatever I say. You’ll do what you want. Just like with Wilkes. During the parade.”
He was referring to our first “case” together, when I’d intentionally put myself in the killer’s path. It had not gone as well as I’d hoped.
“You don’t get to bring that up here, Jack,” I said, straightening now. “If you want to hash it out again, we can, because I still think I made the right decision, however much it pissed you off—”
“You nearly got killed.”
“But I didn’t.”
Suddenly, Jack veered onto an off-ramp. He drove to the first parking lot he saw and turned in, hitting the speed bump hard enough to make my teeth rattle. He pulled into a spot at the far side, got out, slammed the door, and stalked off.
I watched him go. As I did, I remembered the first time I’d seen Jack lose his temper, after the parade incident. I could hear Evelyn telling me to go after him, to talk to him.
“I know, I know,” I murmured.
I waited a minute, in hopes it might give Jack time to cool off. There was a time when I wouldn’t have thought Jack even had a temper. Nothing seemed to faze him. But there was a rage there, tamped down so tight that when it exploded, it was like a flash fire, impossible to predict, burning out of control and out of proportion.
I eased the door open and headed in the direction I’d last seen him. I walked across a scrubby field, littered with trash. I found him on the other side of a broken armchair. He had his back to me. I knew he could hear me scrabbling over the rough and rocky land, but he didn’t turn.
“Are we going to talk about this?” I called as I approached.
He turned then, his dark eyes blazing. “Why? You’ve made up your mind.”
“Did I say that? No. I believe I told you a potential plan, and you lost your temper.”
“I did not—”
“Really?” I waved around us. “You’re seriously going with that, Jack? We’re in the middle of a field. Something tells me we didn’t stop here for a piss break.”
He glowered at me.
“Well?” I said.
“You want to discuss it? Fine. You nearly got killed over Aldrich. The guy who set that in motion? Sebastian Koss. Now you want to meet him? No disguise. Just walk up. Say, ‘Hi, I’m Nadia Stafford. You may have taken out a hit on me—’”
“That’s not—”
“I nearly got you
killed
. Do you understand that?”
I sighed. “Jack, you didn’t—”
“Do you understand what that’s like?” He started bearing down on me. “For me.”
“I’m sor—”
“Do not say you’re sorry! Goddamn it, I don’t ever want to hear that again. Apologizing to me. Thanking me. Making sure I know you appreciate it. Doesn’t matter what it is. Give you a fucking bag of candy? Gotta let me know you appreciate it.”
I glared at him. “I’m sorry, Jack—and yes, there’s that phrase again. I’m sorry if it bothers you to be thanked and it bothers you when I apologize, but that’s how I was raised. It’s called being polite—”
“It’s not being polite. It’s acting like you don’t deserve it. Gifts. Time. Attention. Thank me for a gift. Apologize for a so-called inconvenience. Make damned sure you pay me back somehow. I don’t want gratitude. I don’t want apologies. I don’t want payback. You think I do things for you because I’m being
nice
?”
He spun on his heel and stalked off again. Before I could even think to go after him, he wheeled again, facing me now.
“I got cocky,” he said. “Arrogant. Fuck caution. I can handle this. I can look after you. You say you don’t blame me. Not arguing that. But I’ve fucked up before. Got cocky. Got arrogant. Lost everything. Were you almost killed by that moron? No. Not even close. Doesn’t matter.
I fucked up
. You get that?”
Now I did. I opened my mouth to say so, but nothing came out. I just nodded. When I did, he deflated, the stiffness leaching from his shoulders. I waited a moment, then said, “Tell me what you want to do, Jack.”
* * *
The problem with nixing my plan? As much as Jack hated it, there wasn’t really a viable alternative.
Sebastian Koss was speaking in Chicago late this afternoon. The lecture was open to the public. So I wanted to go. As myself. I’d listen, and then I’d speak to him afterward, in a public place.
Sebastian Koss knew who I was. He knew from the Aldrich case and he knew from the Franco incident. Now the man that initially bound us together—Drew Aldrich—was dead. He’d committed suicide and admitted to the murder. I was understandably shocked and trying to figure things out. I’d spoken to my cousin about the case. I’d discovered Koss had been on the defense, and I remembered him from when he’d reached out after Franco.
If I was “in the area,” wasn’t it plausible that I’d stop at his lecture in hopes of speaking to him about Aldrich as I tried to deal with this sudden upsurge in painful memories? Koss understood victims. He’d made a career of understanding them. He would know, better than anyone, that my quest for answers was a perfectly normal part of the process. He would not question my motive in coming to see him.

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